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FRESH GATHERL D CRANBERRIES,
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A ke 8 ¢L7
i, iIR LAI 2 THE
- "”- d &a ' " hRE
T THE A e 1Y
THANKSGIVING BERRY
.r!..’e..fi : ®
By Evelyn Price Cahoon.
OWN knee-deep in sgphagnum
moss 1 went. It was {n a
cranberry bog in Northern
Minnesota. The cranberry
loves the sand, so at a little distance
the jackpines made a fretted shelter
from the hot September sun, for the
pine tree also loves the sand.
Close around there was only a
waste of spongy moss overlaid with a
growth of cranberry vines, for this
was the dried bed of what had once
been the upper end of the blue lake
we could see glittering in the sun.
The cranberry is particular as to
its home. It must be sandy loam—
never clay. It does not object to a
flooding, on the contrary rather likes
ft—especialiy in the fall when the
hard frosts might nip the berries, and
the flooding prevents the freeze.
But the cranberry daes like drain
age, and so roots itself into sharp
sand along the seashore or along the
borders of the Great Lakes in Ohio,
Michigan, Wisconsin and Minnesota.
Along the Atlantic, the cranberry
hogs have been made much of, and
cultivated to the betterment of the
berry, both in size and flavor; but
along the northern part of the coun
try the wild berry only is found. .
The berry is wild and the place
wherein it grows is often wild. Miles
and miles, that have never known of
civilization exceft by the weodman’s
axe, are dottel here and there with
plats of marsh land overgrown with
wire-stemmed vines that produce
what was once called the crane-berry,
because of the resemblance of the
flower to the head of a crane. The
vine is hardy or it would not with
stand the rough usage of those who
tuthlessly uproot the vines in a care
dess effort to obtaln the fruit.
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‘plant blossoms in June, *fi;f-ga‘pufi-g
‘ber, although the berry is still a deli
-cate pale green, the swamps are in
vaded, for the rule is, “First come,
frat served,” or perhaps more prop
erly, “Finding’s keeping,” as little
“boys say. =
For many a family, in its first year
of settlementinthe“burntover lands,”
among the northern pines, this cran
berry crop, together with that of the
blueberry and the wild red raspberry,
provides the only supply of actual
cash,
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Father, mother and children hurry‘
each morning into the marsh, where
all but the very youngest spend the
day picking with might and main. It
is not delicate work, this picking.
The practiced hand runs the fingers,
curved upward and spread rake-like,
under the wiry branches, and then
draws them upward, retaining the
round, green-white berries, but allow
ing the tiny flake-like leaves to fall
back through. A smart picker can
gather several bushels a day, and
they sell at about a dollar and a half
or two dollars a bushel in the grocery
at the nearest town. From here they
are shipped in crates to the city and,
when they finally reach the house
wife, are selling at twelve and a half
“cents a quart or four dollars a bushel.
At this and at the blueberry season
the Indians on the remaining reserva
tions are allowed to leave the reserve
to pick and sell the berries. They are
reckless in their picking as,- indeed,
are some of the whites; and have no
regard for the life of the vine, Many
use a sgort of pronged scoop, which
they run under the stems, ralsing up
the frait, but also unfortunately drag- |
- Bing up the vines by the roots. i
;‘4_%(;,;,;,#10113 the Kastern coast, as the
& detwy became searce, and the price
Pronortionately high, the thrifty
E Y'f‘*\% Bet out new plants in the old
- bogs. 1t s caslly done, for the stems
k"’“ Toot readily it simply thrust in
the sand, and in three years from
rooting are producing fruit like the
‘native plant. This s one method of
field planting, setting the little
bunches of twigs something less than
a foot apart, all over the field.
Another method practiced is to cut
a quantity of twigs into inch-long
pieces, and scatter them broadcast
like wheat and barrow them in,
In these cultivated fields, where
the bherry is protected, there is no
need of picking before the fruit is
ripe, so it is not gathered until erim
son in October. When the early
frosts of September come on, the
& THANKSCIVING DAY N
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Ro?} Lt :-nanksgivmg comesal last [HC = SERNY 0 2 T 8 I
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farmer as a measure of protection,
floods his field by a system of irriga
tion similar to that in use on the
'arid plains of the West. .~
This {s the season when on clear,
Sill nights, *As. busy as & cranberry.
: rchant” come ,‘_;‘:(« \ :.,« ning;
s T A e B (T I 3
: “ qd ' A,:v ‘ ;“‘- ‘vv‘b ‘ma‘m
Befeen th fviating liohs foodod
a foot and a half deep before he can
g 0 to bed. - sy
The berries that are raised on Cape
Cod have the name of being, in size
and flavor, the best produced. Next
are valued those raised in New Jersey
and New York. But they are all need
ed, for it takes five hundred thousangd
bushels to carry the Nation through
the jubilant month of November, and
somewhat over another five hundred
thousand to last the rest of the year.
The Western wild berry is higher
colored, but smaller and of not quite
so delicate flavor, and is all bought
up out West.
Who ever heard of just the right
kind of Thanksgiving without cran
berries? And the Thanksgiving cran
berries, like the Thanksgiving turkey,
lasts in well-regulated homes for two
or three days. :
1 remember I dodged once a recur
rence of the left-over turkey two or
three days after Thanksgiving, by
going to a friend's to luncheon. And
what do you think she had? Turkey
Pink, Turkey again, you see.
I will tell how she made it, for it
was good. She put through the col
ander the cranberry sauce left from
the turkey dinner, added to it a
spoonful of gelatine, dissolved, stirred
in a cup of chopped turkey meat, and
' set to harden in a mould. When cold
it cut like cheese,
The luncheon closed with large
cranberries, candied like cherries and
equally as good.
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P NG
MISS PERSIMMON.
Miss Persimmon by de fence
One November day
Said she didn’ see no sense
To nufiin’ anyway.
It's very seldom dat you strike
A disposition bad-- -
So criss-cross d4n’ so puckery-like
Dat Miss Persimmon had,
Jack Fros', as he comes along,
Spied Miss Persimmon there,
A-puckerin’ so sharp an’ strong,
» .Xn’ kissed her fair and m}nnrc!
De autumn leaves done langh so gay, °
Dey’s tumblin® f'um de trees,
*Cause Miss Persimmon sence dat day
Is sweet as she kin bel
—Washington Star.
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WHEN BUYING THE .
TH«RKSGIVING TURKEY
When buying the Thanksgiving
turkey have the butcher remove the
leg sinews, as this 3{?1."
drumsticks tender and eatable; it ean
be done with a fork, but it is diffieult,
— :f;?»fi;
Put two tablespoonfuls of alechol
in a saucer, light and over it singe the
bird; this 15 much better tm;
as it does not blacken the skim, =
—_ e
Cut off the feet below the | Q%&
after roasting, the jagged bones ecan
be broken off, leaving the leg ends
white. e
Cat off the head as cloze to the bill
end as possible. Slit the netk skin
along the backbone as far as the
shoulders. Draw it back and pull otit
the crop and windpipe, then cut off
the neck close to the body. The lbtg(
flap of skin is to be folded over t ‘
back, leaving the breast unmarred.
g [
Make a slit just below the brefl.fii
bone, insert two fingers, and 100%
all the organs from the sides of thi
cavity. Firmly grasp the glzzard,&@
largest organ, and pull steadily #at
ward. Cut around the vent, thus re
moving the intestines intact. Bx
amine the cavity, making sure that
all bits of the lungs are removed, as
well as the kidneys. S
If properly done, all that is now
needed is to wipe out the cavity with
a wet cloth. Cut out the oil saeck,
just above the tail, and wipe the skin
well. Put a few spoonfuls of stuffing
under the breast skin and fill the
body cavity, drawing the edges of the
latter together with a few stitches.,
A trussing needle looks like a darn-
ing needle, about twelve inches long.
Have ready some firm, stout twine
in about one-yard lengths. Draw the
neck flap over the back and fasten
~with a stitch of the threaded needle.
Turn the wings so that the tips are
under the fawl. " e A e
Run the threaded needle straight
through the wings and body, entering
and coming out above the bone of
the second joint. Take a parallel re
turn stitch, bringing the twine under
the same bone. Pull the twine tight
and tie, leaving ends three inches
long hanging.
Push the legs against the body,
take a second stitch, going over the
thigh bone; - in returning run the
needle under the bone. For the third
stitch, pass through the ends of the
legs and return through the fleghiest
part.—Atianta Journal.
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; TIRAOTIVING PDINNED
PICKING CRANBERRIES FOR THE THANKSGIVING DINNER.
THE NATIONAL BIRD. |
On lampreys stewed let gourmets dine,
Their palates keyed with caviare;
Toward pheasants stuffed let some incline,
Or juicy tid-bits from the hare;
Let others rave about as rare
Rich venison with Sranes murky;
My choice is—boldly 1 declare—
A tender, plump Thanksgiving turkey.
Let some laud ham that’s drenched in wine
Or dote upon the rib that's “s;}mre;"
Let those that dwell beside the Rhine
~ Choose the bologna for their share;
- Let Presidents gn_xmue the bear
And write thereof in manner clerky;
’ My choice is—boldly 1 declare—
A tender, plump Thanksgiving turkey.
!
Some for the fat opossum pine
_And seek it in its Southern lair;
The canvasback, with jelly fine,
~ Proves to some appetites a snare;
~ Some hold the daintiest of fare
The little ricebird, pert and perky;
My choice is—holdly I dpcimc——
A tender, plump Thanksgiving turkey.
O _Epicurus, I divine
- Your choice might seem both queer and
" quirky,
And so to you might also mine—
A tender, plump Thanksgiving turkey, |
—Avchibald Crombie, in New York Sun.
. Remorse,
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“I am very sorry, Victor, to think
you were such a glutton. Are you
not sorry yourself that you ate so
much turkey?”
. “Yes, mother, ’cause I hadn't any
room left for mince pie.”—Harper's
‘Bazar.
g THANKSGIVING,
One prayel aloud his thenks, and many
£ T :;gard-—
ffififl when he passed forth from the house
. of Mayer
He wore upon his face his secrets bare,
‘While those who met him sighed, and
- thought with Yain
OF all the year had lost them, of the reign
Of grief and sorrow on this earth of ours.
One wore url\on his face the smile of peace,
Al&f he held communion close with God,
And loved the world and all who on it
: trod; : 5 ¥
And those who met him smiled, and
s thought how fair ;
The world must be to him--and straight
" avay there
TRose é‘n tht:.ir hearts a glad thanksgiving
57 hymn! 2 Yo
~ "—Ruth Sterry, in The Criterion.
. MOTHER'S WCE PIES,
. Thanksgiving Day is.almost herc;
LelE .brg»gs gnck times when I =
For weeks, would dream of cranberries,
-Of turkey and of pie.
i‘;anflngt memory— -
K& b Ahat ean mever fade= 7. .-
. ‘Mince p’gl‘:hatimét gt'wm‘gd.e_-.-v g R
“The mincemeal mother used, she made,
_Buch meat you eannot buy;
She never had a cook book when
- She mixed things for her Pie.
With raisins she was liberal;
Bifi' juicy raisins, too;
She’d smile as T devoured pie,
And as my belt line grew.
Thanksgiving Day is almost here,
But mothet’s gone, long since;
No more the day brings juicy pies
“Of mother’s homemade mince.
Thanksgiving Day! [ wish that T
Could have some fairy’s aid, :
I'd have her summon from the past
'~ Some mince pies mother made.
THANKSGIVIN' PUNKIN PIE,
(E; “th’ luck there is in livin’
'Long about good old Thanksgivin’
When th' crops for which gou've striven
are all safely gathered by.
When th’ autumn’s harvest story
Is of summer’s solden glory, ~ °
Then you're feelin’ hur}kr-dory an’ you're
v wantin’ punkin pie!
P~ U— Unkin— -~ ,
Punkin Pie! s
Then there oozes from th’ kitchen
_ Soothin’ odors so bewitchin’
That they set your nostrils itchin’ an’ put
.. _twinkles in your eye.
An’ you know th’ thmg tormentin’
. That you ketch yourself a-scentin’
Is a joy your wife's inventin'—real Thanks.
; givin’ punkin pie,
i U— Uokin—
Punkin Pie!
- You don’t want to wait a minute
' For a chance to go ag'in it—
Want to git your face down in it till it
¢ plasters up your eye.
ll‘jeel likesyou could finish seven,
Tackle nine an’ mebbe ‘leven!
But just one would make a heaven if its
L creglar Hoosier pie!
P U— Unkin—
. Punkin Pie! ;
#25 * —lndianapolis Newa.
{ L 3
| JEARTLE (
S
(2 NG
T orthßpowing
WY orlh7s powing
New York spends morc money on
education annually than any other
city in the world.
| New York City has added 4,100,-
{ 000 to its population in the last cen
’ tury.
{ A recent German estimate of the
. world’s grailroads give them a total
| length of 563,771 miles.
| Buenos Ayres has a population of
| 1,200,000, of which about eighty per
cent. is foreign, the Italians forming
| about sixty per cent. of the foreign
population,
| St. Petersburg authorities have is
| sued an order forbidding the students
| of the cadet corps to read ‘“Sherlock
| Holmes” and other stories of a simi
| lar character.
| The ladies of a Methodist church
| out in Missouri resolved to use the
. money they had thought of spending
| on Easter hats toward lifting a S7OO
| mortgage on the church.
i Terrific sand storms oceur in the
| Shantung provinces of China. Around
| tombs and other places where the
soil is not disturbed the annual de
| posit of these storms can be distinetly
straced for ages, layers of an eighth
' of an inch being the minimum for
. any season. %
South Africans practiced irrigation
nearly 400 years ago.
St. Louis reports a case of hypno
tism over the telephone at a distance
- of 150 miles.
| Philadelphia is preparing to spend
86,000,000 on new docks on the Del
- aware River water front. 2
; Ten billion newspapers were cireu
lated in 1907, and the figure will be
5 considerably raised this year.
| The met revenue of the New York
- City postofiice during th~ fiscal year
just ended was $11,815,137.71.
e complete clear-out of old lubri
cant will often change a sluggish au
tomobile to a lively and responsive
affair.
~ Longest prize fight on record oc
~curred at Cheshire, England, in 1825,"
between Jack Jones and Pat Tunney,
276 rounds, requiring four and one-
PR
ca ¥ Enflfizn, an Englishman, who
has issued a challengeto the world for
‘the memory championship, although
only a° young man of twenty-three
vears, I 8 a veritable walking encyclo
pedia, for he has memorized 40,000
dates of the principal events in the
world's history since the creation.
\ e —— ———————————
| FRAMING IT UP FOR HIM.
Fight in the Street Faked For the
' Disadvantage of the Unwary.
~ Three or four small boys waited
~outside a down-town restaurant the
other evening until a man came out
- who appeared to be a little the worse
for food. As he paused at the side
- walk’s edge two of the boys squaréd
~off and began apparently to fight
- with the heartiest 111-will.
~ One was short; tne other tall. The
little fellow was seemingly having
‘ all the best of it, when suddenly the
1 big one ran.
. '‘Come on, get after him,” said the
| inebriate on the sidewalk.
. ““Bet you a dollar I can lick him,”
' said the big fellow, stopping in his
' flight.
. Then too the other small boys
' about volunteered to bet with the
! tipsy man. i ‘
, He might have made the bets but
for a friend who came out of the res
{ taurant just then. The friend knew
| the game and dragged his man away.
| “Just a plant to get a bet down.
Then the big iellow will lick him
and take the money. They split,” he
| said.—New York Sun.
R R S——————
% Fisherman Dodged Swordfish.
: The fishing schooner Dorcas was
| eruising off Georges Thursday when
' her lookout espied a big swordfish,
' The man in the eradle drove the iron
| and hooked the fish.
James Wallate went in his dory to
get the fish, The swordfish saw him
coming and charged directly at him,
| Wallace had just time to secramble to
| the stern when the fish struck the
| boat and the sword penetrated the
{ dory so that nearly two feet of the
j blade extended through the hole. The
| fish was rendered helpless, and” Wal
| lace knocked it on the head.—Boston
| Herald, 8 o
| A “Slick” Answer.
| It was a wise young man who
! paused before he answered the widow
| who asked him to guess her age,
| “You must have some idea of it,” she
{ said, with what was intended for an
{ arch sidewise glance. “I have several
{ ideas,” he admiited, with a smilo.
{ “The only trouble is that I hesitate
iwhether to make _you ten years
{ younger on acecount of your looks or
{ ten vyears clder on account of vour
{ brains.” Then, while the widow
| smiled and blnghed, he took a gracs
| ful but spesdy leuve ~lllusirated
¢ Bite
F lixivdf S
X enna
acts %imfl'y yeT pmmPT,'
%{\on’( e bowels, cleanses
e ?/s‘[em effectu au)/.
assis(s one n gvercowung
habitual consT\PaTnon
%ermanenfly. To get its
ene{ucml effects by
.
the denuine.
'fionufacfurcdbfthe
fFic Syrup Co.
SOLD BY LEADING DRUCGISTS-EO4 pe-BOTTLE
_LASBIFIED ADVERTISEMENTS,
DriiNEsS AND CATARRH CURE.
INHALENT CATARRHAL JELLY Cures
Deafness and Catarrh. Trial treatmer tby
mail free. REA CO.. Minneapolis, Minn.
It is no time for blinking when ruin
stares a man in the face.
THE REV. IRL R. HICKS ALMANAC
For 1909, ready Nov. 15th, bigger and bet
ter than ever, by mail 35 cen:s, on néws
stands 80c. One copy free with WorD AND
Woßrks monthly magazine at £1 a year:
Worp AXD Wongs Puß. Co,, 2201 Locust
Street, St. Louis, Mo.
Running water helps to run the
farm,
Hicks' Capudine Cures Headache,
Whether from Cold, Heat, Stomach, oz
Mental Strain. No Acetanilid or dangerous
drugs. It’s Léguid. Effects immediately.
10¢c., 23¢., and 50c., at drug stores
The birds that eat the bugs shouid
be protected.
TETTERINE—A RELIABLE CURE,
TETTERINE I 8 & sure, safe and speedy eure
for eczema, tetter, skin and scalp diseases
and itching piles. Endorsed by physicians;
%raised by thousands whc have used it.
ragrant, soothing, antiseptic. 50c. at
druggists or by mail from J, I'. SEUPTRINE,
Dept. A, Savannah, Ga.
CAUGHT A SEA BAT.
Strange Fish Taken in a Seine Off
North Carolina Coast.
One of the rarest specimens of the
fish kingdom known to waters con
tiguous to the North Carolina coast
was captured in a seine at Mason
boro Sound Monday by William
Hewlett, a fisherman. The figsh, which
was brought to the city last even
ing, is what is called -“the sea bat”
and it is a perfect reproduction of a
leather wing bat on a large scale.
The fish is about fifteen inches long
and about thirty inches across the
~ Strange to state it had a thin
threadlike tail about fifteen inches
in length and on each side of the
rear appendage were two perfectly
formed gloved feet, with a smaller
diversion having the exact appear
ance of a thumb, with the other part
of the hand mittened. The mouth
of the strange specimen was about
five inches acress and on each side
o! the mouth or the under side of
wie body there were five “strainers”
or holes through which the fish is
sald to rid itself of refuse products
resulting from the forage it picks up
at the bottom of the sea. The top
of the fls} was a dark slate color
and the uunder part of the body was
white.
One old negro fisherman more than
70 years of age stated that this was
only the second specimen of the sea
bat he had ever seen in his long ex
perience as a fisherman. The speci-
UPWARD START
After Changing From Coftee to Pos
tum.,
Many a talented person Is kept
back because of the interference of
coffee with the nourishment of the
body.
This is especially so with those
whose nerves are very sensitive, as is
often the case with talented persons,
There is a simple, easy way to get rid
of coffee evils, and a Tenn:Mady's ex
perience along these lines is worth
considering. She says:
“Almost from the beginning of tho
use of coffee it hurt my stomach. By
the time I was fifteen I was almost a
nervous wreck, nerves all unstrung,
no strength to endure the most triv
ial thing, either work or fun. %
“There was scarcely anything 1
could eat that would agree with me.
The little 1 did eat seemed to give me
more trouble than it was worth, I
finally quit coffee and drank hot wat
er, but there was so little food I
could digest, I was literally starving;
was s 0 weak I could not sit up long
at a time.
“It was then a friend brought me a
hot cup of Postum. I.drank part of
it and after an hour I felt as though
I had had something to eat — felt
strengthened. That was about five
years ago, and after continuing Pos
tum in place of coffec and gradually
getting stronger, to-day 1 can eat and
digest anything I want, walk as much
as 1 want. My nerves are steady.
“1 believe the first thing that did
me any good and gave me an upward
start, was Postum, and I use it alto
gether now instead of coffee.”
"“There's a Reason.”
Name given by Postum Co., Battle
Creek, Mich Read '“The Road to
Wellville,” in pkgs
Ever read the above letter? A
Hew one appears from time to time.
They are goenwvine, true, and fuil of
Luman intercest. .