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Show TOE BEAVER COUNTY WEEKLY. PRESS.' BEAVER, UTAH mom scours ' rjJc:;nc::iaE::::c::m3 FC3.T7EUTr-CIXYEAE- 3 U 0 7 V E LL All D I! A PP IT y ir (Conducted by National , Council of the Boy Scouts of America.) SEA SCOUTS ' t TROM! ENGLAND 1 , .r ' Qfc n-- . : . , riod la appreciated 1 brEng!and shown by the special arrangements which have been made for their benefit with the White Star line,", writes James K. West, chief scout executive. "Every, White Star liner, wbetherJ making port in New York, Boston or Halifax, crxrfes two or three British sea scouts who are shipped as 'cadets.' are regular members of the crew and are getting an unforgettable and fascinating experience of real seafaring. "Some of these boys learn to lore their good ship and the life of the sea so well that they continue In the serv-lesail the seven seas, make strange ports, and eventually become mates, -officers or In New Tork, Dr, J. J.Macdonald, an American' scoutmaster. Is always ready at the pier to greet these British boys, and to take charge of them as long as they remain on shore. ... " 7 . - i. ; H )mmr:tr:r-,w I r II t - three-fourt- , ihat gone, also PE-RU-- the purpose." . For any disease due to catarrh r catarrhal conditions, wrw1':- is equally dependable. lb h " -- - Coughs, colds, catarrh of the bead, stomach trouble, constipation, rheumatism, pains Ja the back, side and loins, bloating, belching gas, indigestion, A--- tR - catarrh of the large and small -- - in- testines, are some of too troubles is especially for which A recommended. can be purchased A ' '1.1 4 liKi i -- .. anywhere form. la either tablet or liquid . 'EBS'S FRECKLES 1 t 1 ' " JJv.' . A Curioua Case. "Here's a curious case." ' . "What's the matter?" 4 mar-"Young woiHftn of twent rying an old man, past seventy t" "Nothing peculiar about" that the -ld "man is very rich; I presume." "That's the curious thing about It--- be isn't, he's as poor as a cnurch mouse." i - i. I r - ; HE symbol of Thanksgiving t Why, turley,' of course. :Thanls-givih- g t . s i Drop a nickel in the toy bank and get five cents' worth of trying to get It out tomorrow. - Weil-Know- meant plenty and good ness. So does turkey plenty of white meat and plenty of dark' for everybody. And as for the ' st goodness-jxiremember, how, when a slow and awkward carver, was on the job, you sat and felt And the stuffing thaff water! mouth your too. Down with the, feU and goodness, plenty 'ow who says g lessens the sweet flavor, and delicious aroma of the birdl That g fellow never lasted real in all i born days. Why, it's the soul of ths twly.r You just smell that heavenly smell and then Ha Is to Head the Pioneer Scouts of you take all the carver will give you for a first . the ZQ Brotherhood. helping. What'll I haUt lmparticular. Big ' THE KINQ AND THE BOY SCOUTS. piece.' Lots of stuffing. Seattle: Wash.- -? nsed six bottles of Herae's Ooldea Medical Disoovery. I bad an abscess (was in the hospital at the time) snd I feel sure the 1 'Disoovery helped 1 as it cleared 75 me, tbe blood. I have bad no recurrence of the trouble. That was in 1900. I aim tmvl IV. Pierce's Favorite s tit. If turkey-stuffin- , . r - ' Yk4-- . - says,-quotin- - -- , . . , : wing-beatin- critic doctc" Oregon CSty, Oregon: "I would not be alive today if H wm not for Dr. Pieroe's Golden Medie&l Diaooveqr. I doctored with the doctors for five yens for hardening of the liver and severe stomach trouble, but eontinusd to grow worse. IUredthree tnonths on crackers snd milk. I had big liver blotches on my faoa, my heart was would have spaQs of bong numb all over, sty stomach would bloat terribly, and I would have such hard pain In my Stomach that the perspiration would hist off me. I also had terrible headaches, told me about Dr. Pierce's Golden Medical Discovery and bought me a bottle. I ood tinned taking it until I was completely cured. I have kept it in the boose ever since. It is a wonderful medicine and I just can't say too much in its favor as I know it saved my life." MRS. M. & HYATT, 6th and Monroe Sts. wk, ra DR.PIERCES" (GODLEDEtU rn anal a. HEADACHE ' Often Caused by it Acid-Stoma- ch ! : ef-th- etr be-llv- ed . . ' . . i aT rOR THE DLOOD.HVER.LLIMCS. 1 1 ,( . , i' - . "Lived Three Months on Crackers and Milk? : A JW time of middle h'fe without MBS. E. . WRIGHT, Z23 OtomBC. , 4 ,PreeripUon and - The mother turkey of the woods keeps her proceeding is as ImporUnt , economically as the first And under that heading the art of Mr. children under control and at her side until midJordan Is final, though' French chefs, amid their winter. By that time the brood is full grown. smears and cococtions, may voice exclamations The young gobblers, Mr. Mcnhenny .says; then ' leave their mothers and sisters and form bachelor and denials. '7 7 ' : clubs among Jthemselvcs. "If the turkey is young," Mr. McRhenny Mr. Jordan, "cook It in the way usual to Turkey society In the forests, from December nntil early In the spring, is made np of three distove baking, after first fllllpg. its cavity with a On the day that King George gave hi After studying the wild turkey for 60 years, suitable dressing of bread, .crumbs, pepper, alt visionsthe old hens snd young hens ; the young great garden party to those who had hunting It for 60 years and photographing- It for and onions chopped fine, moistened with fresh gobblers, snd the old gobblers. At mating time, distinguished themselves In patriotic ten years, Charles L. Jordan, an Alabama genwork during the war, there were in- tleman, thought with Benjamin Franklin, that the country butter. Tbls is, U he best dressing that ; in March, there is a reunion. It is then that the old gobblers strut and gobble and call to their .1 can be made.-- and It wtll detract bothlng from tbe cluded only two .organizations of eagte hasn't an honest leg to stand on aa the real flavor of the bird nor add to It" plural wives as well as to the hunters. young people. These were the boy bird of freedom. ' u. " At the moment the hens begin to set the old scouts and the girt guides. . Oysters or chestnuts, If put Into the dressing, Though a little vain and silly," the turkey, are gobblers. In couples and groups up to 20, again profanation, and shrimps au abomination. The king particularly asked that the Franklin said, is a native American "and a bird In the view of Mr. Jordan. Wine and celery desequester themselves from all but their own boys and girls themselves should be of courage." r Had he known more on the subject .;,.; , society. , .So they, live, summer, sutumn and winstroy the rich turkey flavor. present to the number of 150, as rep- he would have added that the turkey Is both wise Originally ,thei wlid turkey was found in most . ter. They never fight except when they are show- resentatives of the rest Picked, as and cleanly and ir never vain or sljly except durparts of the United States from the forests of -- ' lng off to the ladles and then their combats are they were, on from every county In ing th gobbling season, f Can as much be said of not mortal. The rules of their contests of Maine and, westward as far . as Nebraska and the British Isles, they naturally pre- any other biped i.V4-,-j' ; southward to the lower pnrts. of Mexico, Gontalo strength permit shoving, pulling, pecking and The gobbling season among turkeys, of course sented a very smart lot. Fernandei de Ovledo, the Spanish historian, who .The king talked for quite opens and ends with spring., 4t i then that the ,wblle wrote many books about the West Indies, printed They are brave birds, as the Mcllhennys, a!' la praise of the work of scoutmasters. male struts and calls and reveals bis whereabouts famous hunters, will testify. Furthermore, thej of the wild turkey at Toledo In the a description Results were what he judged by, not to hunters and thelf dogs. 7 are wise birds. It Is the exceptional hunter who year 1527. He had seen the males In the gobbling the steps. Results are the only test, During the rest' of the year, lidwever, he frusseason and supposed they were peacocks, . gets a sight of them in summer. They are not , and the results reflected with greatest trates nmn and mocks at all his plans, tie Is In ' Thus Ovledo ' Into the iurkey afraid, however, of the farmer who Is plowing, literature, brought the on Invisible to but woods, enemies armed with the workers. He possible credit ' busking corn or reaping. Bfaid that he had personal experience guns. Brave, silent dignified and capable, he Is l' Bui If the records are reliable'. It was Alejandro Geraldittl. an ! Italian and .the; Roman Catholic Notwithstanding the spectacular enterprise of of this, because, on account of. their unconquerable ".until, he becomes elocutlve and turkey ranching In Texas and California on a and begins to make a huge fan of his ' bishop of Santo Domingo, who Introduced the caimtlllty, scouts had come now to be love-lor- n grand scale, the old farm must still be relied turkey Into Europe. A let er he wrote In 1523 used for all large functions at the.pal-ac- tall. 1 mentions that he hod sent a pair of turkeys to Wild! upon for most of our Thanksgiving and Christmas . turkeys have had their historians, biogra- . . , turkeys, says James Hamilton Byrd In Grit On And he went on to say this of phers iand' antiquarians, says James B. Morrow; ; a friend In Rome. domestication of the thousands upon thousands of farms, as a side was The . bird, however, In Globe. Scientists have written " the Boston beaut of a scout is scMtitlLg: issue to her regular work. It Is common practice brought about by the Spariliirds, whose navlgn-tor- s tbnt yon sever have to tell him what about them in a lingo that nobody can undertook It home In their queer liftle ships and for the farm wife to keep a half a doren or perto do, and yon can rely on his doing stand. There are enough turkey books here and localised It In Europenn barnyards." as John haps a dozen turkey bens and a gobbler from A scout never makes a mistake. I in France, Spain and Great Britain to make a ' which to rnlse a flock Of 40 to 50 turkeys. FIske ststes the case. This jiappened tn 153a -. have never known a scout to make a large library In themselves. Eariy,1n the spring the turkey hens begin layEighty years later Christopher ; Newport, the The department of agriculture In Washington mistake." v. ; , James-'- " of the founded leader Then comes the brooding season. By Octo(hat expedition ing. field a who a , expert employs spends larger part, town. In Virginia, sailed hack to England. With ber 1 the young turkeys have grown to be big. 8COUT3 LIKE WOOL CAMP DUDS of the, year with flocks of domesticated turkeys hire he took a large quantity of yellow sand that rangy birds, so now the fattening or flntahlng that he may learn tluk habits and search out all was gold1L and several .coops ot wild, process Is begun. Little da they know ss they are he:thought The of the secrets lyes. turkey T theli, industry "moisture" can" Bodily' evaporate turkeys, "the first." sgaln to quote John FIske, being fed more and more of the farmer's corn throtich weolnu mnrh mnrn. mkIIc touches almost, etfry;jfarn. ever Mil ""that of graced fsre;""' dressed are night of tbedtebollestl-lnteBtten- a of live Tralnloflds and TheJWvery turkeys than through cotton or linen cloth, ' was sand be to found bat master's the better half. Ten daye or two weeks valueless, turkeys which keeps the moisture In its texture shipped from large and small towns In the South. and a and became source of fore multiplied marketing they are literally feasted on grain in with herders large the farms West There are turkey until it Is thoroughly saturated. And . , stuffed three or four times a day until Just be- profit to British farmers. for the flocks, and turkeys In droves, like cattle . It la the dampness next to the skin that During the relgif of Chftrle fiklhg' of England! " "'fottrthe enactment of the tragedy of their young causes colds and chills so stick to and sheep," can. be seen jn Tennessee; California' -. the, .prjeea. of. mnnjuth Ings. wert.regtjlated.by 4a w ?h.luJd, H ,f.li!LlHtbl,Sei,WK " nd - elsew here, --Just- before, - Thantscl vlng - and --,h -?!- fW?. woolens; "'"'"'-,"-- v Hnme. are the Also ' thfrrt cock to market historian, on the I says a' Christmas, ee em turkey Although way brought turkey ranching In Texas and Call- that yott wash But right rour, awnings and six pence, $142; a turkey hen fornla has almost reached the proportions of a .... .Tou kill their betterness right off If turkey doctors. child75 or three doors from of a out shlJI-lug- s, cents, But shilling, and spectacular industry, by far the greater two new goose beJordan, Mr, living apd let of In little bits yon soap get or 50 cent. A pheasant cock sold for tL50. number of turkeys are raised on the farms of the tween the fibers and thus ctog up the hood to old age, and meeting his death jat last a pheusant hen for $1.25 snU a partridge for 25 channels through which the moisture from a poacher's shot knew more about turkeys middle West Ohio, Indiana. Illlnole, Kentucky, cents. Turkeys then were ' a novelty hi Crest ew England, long famous Is supposed to go. ; , than anyone who has ever lived. He began studyMissouri and Iowa. ' ' i 'Britain. ; - ' , A good way la to soak the garments ing them, hidden behind fallen trees and hi the for Its turkeys, raises comparatively few. alAbout T.000,000 turkeys are grown rifle. In lukewarm suds, then squeese ont brush, while still too young to carry though Its Teputstlon still lingers. Some of the yearly in this country. Texas produces more thsn any the water, by pulling the woolens ; Chief among the pupils of this line old 'master big turkey ranches have a thousand or. more turother state, Missouri Is second, Illinois third. through the bands. And don't twist or was Edward A. Ucllhenny, a business man of keys, and some of (he turkey drives to market Iowa fourth, Ohio fifth and Indiana sixth." Aa are most extraordinary sights. The flocks, of the wring. If yon don't want to Invite Avery Island. Louisiana, at whose suggestion reserves for birds have been established In different ordinary western turkey weighing 12 pounds used stretching or shrinking. middle West are ususlly leM than a hundred. to sell for about t&M st sets II In the eastern Just get ont as much of the water as gorts of the United Ststes. The Mcllhenney Still 50 to 75 fine gobblers and hens weighing markets. As to Its cost this Thankscivlnr 15 to 25 rounds each Ja not a mean sluht yon possibly can and bang the "duds" fimlly owns Avery Island, aorae 3.500 acres' In ex: op to dry. tent, where the fan .vanishing-- white, heron find? Igness Is. as. good as anybody's. : tod represenU Indeed no amall - valuer j , Mr. Ilhenny'wm tell you that wild turkeys lite There are still millions of acres In Texas, omn refuge during the breeding season, "and where ; WHAT THE SCOUTS DO. ia ttie regions where they are born. ' If they go ducks by the thousand live throughout the win noma and New Mexico where the wild turkev " away. It la for the reason that Ihere Is a shortage1 ten r. breeds plentifully, snd wh.'re turkey huni'ns Is of food In the territory constituting their natural "At a victory celebration for the solAmong the turkey hunters of today Mr. great sport. Buttof far more Importance to the diers at Ceneseo, N. T, the boy ts promtnant But for his. fidelity and range. After feeding they will return to rhelr turkey market ts the "still hunting" which Is ' ' . j old homes, - scouts were asked to take care of two enthusiasm snd his skill as a writer. 'Mr. Jorcarried on fn the spring In many places to mt ure n Durfng the 00 years (hat 'Mr. Jordan spent In order io airplanes and guard them through the dan's practical and fascinating knowledge of 'the eggs r possibly the very young blnls-llost f wiW" Turkey "WeM httotlnr aod studying. 1W turkey, se never asw riH the or huord of one that died a natural death. "Nor." Some happy scouts sre those Of Los and naturalists. So, too. would have been Inst Into tame flocks.. The tsme turkey, has degener he ssld. hsve I heard of any disease or epidemic A short Mr. Jordan's method of cwtliig. whether The ated until It Is no Ionizer tbe virile bird It mm in Angeles Troops 1 and 2. of ourpllgrlm. fathers but the tU4 time ago they went over 4a Hollywood turkey Is shot in the woods w. less ftrarantlcalty, snwTg them." Blackhead, a common d!stempctU-lhe.day- s domestic turkeys, baa baffled the doctors, Is taken from a tree near. the house or from a Is subject to no known disease. On some among snd were the guests of Mary Pick-forturkey "" -," far, and In regions has made the production of of the forest reserves the government Is protert-turkey- s the movie star, who not only coop.; the next transnot only unprofitable but practically out - tag the wild turkey, for, this Importsnt purpwt been A obtained, cave them a royal reception, but also turkey having . of the question. .. of using It as a breeding stock. presented then) with 23 for ' troop action ts to prepare tt for (he tabl. The second wuIpmcnL , V n Pacific Coast Folk Testify - turkey-stuffin- y--- was second-bottle- VVSS - m hs hoarseness ARMSTRONG PERRY. ' - PE-RU-N- tirtpptr,'?"' e. . tired feeling. I am on my "Will Hereafter be constantly In xny house.- It is the best medicine ever put up for e, WV ; 1 ' - he was afflicted. lava been sufHa writes: fering with chronic bronchitis for. twenty-si- x years and every winter cold and become so I wouldI catch koarse could not rpeak fcr six or eight weeks. I could get only tem, porary relief. "This winter I "was taken will ' Grip and was la awful shape. A. fellow workman advised ma to taJt6 hal By the tlma of a bottle, tha tised Th a t the splendldWork; done by British sea scouts during the war pe- : TMU IS WORTH KJEAJDINQ j The experience of Mr. E. J. Urn 1433 Rosa street, LaCrosse, ralik, Nv isconsin, is hleflr' rcmarksbla on account i tha length of tima - ', Tm, lnd.d. mere often thea yo thlaib BeeenM atuttne with ! eiantloa, burtkurn, belchlnc, bloat end If ot checked, will eves, f the odr. tuelly - et erery- yltal erer,- hlindinc,- epltttlnc hemdectaes ere, therefore, et freqaent occurrence reevlt . &f thia " . aaAmlm Take SATONIC. It qnlckly bmnUhM with Hi soar bloat, pala and sea-I- t tide dlfeatloB helpe the etomaca ret roll tr.nnh from every mouthful ef food yea eat Million, of people are mleereble, n, ru orn ch "t04 klUas- - eeoae.e ACID-- -. 41Poleona, created by ohart.d with add, erepartly abeorbed tat tlie i)h and- autrlButid' throuheu '" TOMACH, eeted food -f - Th, 'tea eaoeee ir..!ntl1.V,t,matUm. blUoaaneaa. ctrrhoela of - rhea- - the liver; heart troable. alcere and ovea caacer or the etemach. It robe He victim, of their health, andermlaea tbe atrencth of tha Saoet vltorooa. Set back yoar phyeieal , " treaeth be foil of vim and d be happy, yea nsaat Irr.OTyear . . SJlaridBaTONIC yea win And the very help end It' f aaraateed. So (et a bis " ff tTm wJL.i rw drWIt aad r,r xr.beIfHi M year nwawy. ,AT03IC Toufmm , ; : ny Cuticura Stops Itchincrand Saves the Hair -- ' d, bavea pw-wII(w- o4 rwrteT-smltTttrtHtni- PersistentCougha ZZt-iS- M 4rriuoH aoothlnt. KSVrtiva axHaacaadeid. eopiatMte mmm j |