HIS Is the season of the year when the prospects for the turkey crop outweigh almost all other questions in the minds not only of produce men , hut in the estimation of the great mass of householders. The supply , and consequently the prices , of turkeys have fluctuated so wide ly In different years within the past decade or two that there is always an uncertainty In the minds of the ultimate consumers akin to that mystery that invariably envelopes the "peach crop" early in the season. This ex plains in a measure why many far-sighted citi zens to whom a few cents per pound difference i.in . price is ever a source of worry now make it V a practice to order their Thanksgiving turkey- \ long in advance and it explains , too , why many of ' the turkey buyers who handle the birds on a large scale begin their rounds of the poultry farms earlier in the season than was once their wont and keep close tab on the growing fowl. This "scouting" by the purveyors of our prin- . clpal Thanksgiving delicacy is a wise move for , tA ) it known , weather con ditions throughout the spring , summer and au tumn have a most import ant bearing upon the tur key crop at the end of November. For instance , if a wet spring be encoun tered great numbers of the young turkeys suffer. In some instances they -are aimost literally "drowned out" The au tumn is a yet more crucial time in the tur key-raising industry. A open autumn , even if it be mild , is fairly auspi cious , but the ideal condi tion is found in cool , crisp , bracing weather which Inspires the tur keys to roam in search ot food and causes them to I V a saasg is m fatten in prime condition. Such weather condi tions also lighten the cares of the farmer who does not devote his entire attention to turkeys , and who usually has so many other responsibili ties that he is mighty glad when the turkeys can shift for themselves to say nothing of the bene fit to his pocketbook. These farmers and poul try raisers , it may be added , are about the only classes in our national community who never need give a thought to a bird for the home table on Thanksgiving. There is always some sort of a turkey for the gathering round the festive board at the homestead. We may digress for a moment , too , to add that in late years there has come a great change' in sentiment on the part of many of the farmers as to the Thanksgiving turkeys for their own tables. In days gone by there was often a disposition to regard almost any old gobbler as sufficient for the home folks. All the choice birds were sent to market , because they would bring the best prices , and the farmer and his household not infrequently had to put up with the leavings , as it were. Latterly , however , as greater prosperity has come to so many of the farmers there is a growing disposition to re gard the best as none too good for the kings of the soil , and this applies to turkeys as to every thing else. Consequently it is usual for the progressive farmer to retain one of his tenderest birds for the kith and kin that break bread with him on Thanksgiving , and not infrequently the chosen bird has been singled out from the others long in advance and is specially fattened in ac cordance with the tastes of the family. There has been much discussion on the part of the public in recent years regarding the compara tive scarcity of small turkeys that is six to eight pound birds in the Thanksgiving market. There is no difficulty in fixing the responsibility for this disappearance of the small turkeys. It is due to the growing tendency among turkey raisers to devote their best efforts to the "bronze" variety of fowl the largest variety of the bird. The lure of the American love of bigness has made Itself felt in the turkey realm , and the 30 to 36 pound birds which have attracted so much atten tion at fashionable hotels and on banquet boards have come to be regarded as the most desirable specimens of that fowl , which becomes for one day each year our national bird. While rummaging in some boxes to which he had fallen heir from a for mer tenant of the house he lives in at Lander , Wyo. , Pat Curry came across what appeared to be an ordinary blue serge coat. He tried to haul it from the box and it required both hands to get it out. Curry at first thought he had round | a treasure coat and that it contained gold coin. When he lifted It out of the box it gave forth a metallic rattle. He slit one of the pockets and discov ered that between the serge and the heavy silk lining was concealed a com plete suit of steel armor. The steel plates are two inches square , a six teenth of an inch in thickness , perfor- * ! > * - keys constitute the most profitable class of poul try if properly handled. As a matter of fact , from the time the turkey is six weeks old he virtually makes his own livelihood , wandering around and eating bugs , grasshoppers , waste grain and other eatables that if not an actual pest are useless to the farmers. To be sure , some of the fancy turkey raisers are credited with fatten ing their Thanksgiving offerings on milk and chestnuts and other delicacies , but they get for such fancy fowl prices sufficiently higher than th © regular quotation to recompense them for their trouble. An expert who recently made an Investigation of the turkey raising industry on behalf of the United States government declares that turkeys can , if grown in a favorable locality , be made to return a profit to the growers if sold as low as eight cents per pound , live weight , whereas if they bring three or four cents per pound above that figure , as they usually do , the turkey grower should feel well satisfied with his occupation. Now , as a matter of fact , there are few sections of the country where at Thanksgiving time tur- It must be admitted , however , that the bronze variety of turkey not only holds the post of honor because of its size and its rich plumage but also , in the estimation "of many epicures , because of its flavor as well. There is no doubt that the size of the bronze variety its standard weight ranges from 16 to 36 pounds is to be attributed to the fact that the birds of this family originated from a cross between the wild and the tame turkey. For that matter , the wild turkey of North Amer ica was the ancestor of all our present-day do mestic turkeys , but the "crosses" which have been made in the case of the bronze variety have been particularly fortunate in inducing mammoth size. However , one of the officials of the depart ment of agriculture recently declared that the bronze turkey had been developed too much in the direction of size , and if he can convert the turkey raisers to his way of thinking we may see some years hence an era of smaller bronze turkeys of even finer flavor than those regarding which such enthusiasm has been manifested by lovers of the good things of life. Of course ( .he vaunted bronze variety Is not the whole thing in turkeydom , for there are six other standard varieties , the branches of the family in addition to the bronze , being , the Narragansett , the buff , the slate , the white , and the black. Many people who think that we have been en joying pretty appetizing turkey from time out of mind may be surprised to learn that the prestige of the turkey as an article of food was seriously threatened a few years ago through carelessness and lack of foresight in breeding methods. Not much was said about it , except in the poultry papers and at the conventions of poultry raisers , but the menace was sufficient to arouse the more progressive turkey raisers , with the result that they mended their ways , put a ban on inbreed ing and went In for the purebred or standard- bred turkey , with the welcome outcome that rich , new , vigorous blood made its influence felt in infusing strength and vigor in turkey flocks all over the country. In the case of growers who have had the bene fit of enough experience to qualify them for the work , turkey raising is , under favorable condi tions , a highly profitable occupation. No other kind of live stock wil return so large a profit to the successful producer as will poultry , and tur- I Coat of Mail in Garment keys do not bring two or even three times the eight cents that Uncle Sam's expert has set down as a figure that will yield a profit Of course , the farmer who can sell his turkeys direct to housewives can get from 25 cents per pound up according to the state of the market and the quality of the fowl but even the growers who market through commission merchants , as most of them do , ought to net from 16 to 20 cents per pound , providing the sales agent is not allowed to pocket more than his share of the sales price. Of course , for the grower to net 20 or 24 cents a pound , It is necessary to have the choice , specially - ly fattened turkeys that bring top-notch prices in the markets catering to the wealthy class in the large cities. Recent years have witnessed a change In the methods of shipping turkeys to market Many fowl are yet hauled to town , as in days of old , in the farmer's wagon , but the largest share of the turkeys for city markets are now shipped oy ex press. Just at Thanksgiving time when turkeys are coming to market in car-load lots many of the birds make the journey by fast freight , but under such conditions a man must be sent along with each car load to feed the birds , so that In the end It ft likely to be just as cheap to send the birds.by express , the transit thus being ac complished in a few hours and no feeding en route being necessary. To carry out the present- day policy of haste in transferring the turkeys from the farms to the dinner tables of the folk in towns and cities , we find special automobile trucks waiting at the railroad stations to receive the crated birds as they are unloaded from the cars , and these motors rush the turkeys without loss of time to the commission houses , hotels or other destinations. A few years ago a car load of live turkeys was a shipment of such unusual size as to cause comment Nowdays such con signments are handled by the hundreds at Thanksgiving time , and a. car load of live tur keys was , on one occasion , sent from New York to San Francisco , the rental of the special car for this journey amounting to $70. In Chicago there are dealers who receive a dozen car loads of tur keys a day at Thanksgiving time , and as many as 25,000 birds have been received in that city in. one day at the height of the rush to stock larders for Thanksgiving. ated at one end and sewed , lapping each other , on to a cloth framework that exactly fits the interior of the' garment. No one can be found in Lander who can give any clue to the Identity of the owner of the strange suit or ar mor. It Is thought by many that it Is a relic of the days of the Overland mail and was worn by some one who feared attack from Indians and that it came to Lander In the early days. Others believe it belonged to some one who had a mountain feud on his hands and feared an ambush by the enemy. The Soldier's Wit. 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