THE COLUMBIAN. BLOOMSBURG, k'A- SAFE-GUARDING THE PEARL MUSSEL A Valuable and New Mississippi River Industry is in Danger of Extinction STORIES OF SOME LUCKY FINDS Cc'entlsts Tk Up the Question of Artificial Propagation Excitement Caused by Lucky Finde Pearl Hunting Parties. One of the tasks the Government lias set for Itself this suxmer is to find out why the pearl bearing mus - eels of the rivers of the Mississippi River are disappearing, and to try to propagate Uiein. A commission head ed by Prof. Paul Dartsch of Burling ton has made a thorough pearch of the Mississippi and Its tributaries to find out all about the mussel. The mussel is highly regarded in that section of the country. Not only has It been the basis of a very pro fitable Industry ir the way of furnish ing raw material for button making but it has enriched a great many who have merely taken up the hunt In the hope of finding valuable pearls. Mussels have been found in large quantities along the upper Mississippi, but pearls are few and far between, due possibly to the fact that the temperature of the water is not so favorable to the propagation of the slug, the technical cair.e for the pearl bearing secretions. Down along the White and Arkansas rivers hundreds o- thousands of dollars worth of pearls have been found in the last live years. In Arkansas more than a million dollars worth of them have been unearthed in that time. The pearl bearing mussel has been found now and then for years In the Arkansas rivers by fishermen who use it as a bait for the drum and the red horse varieties of the sucker family of fish. Several lucky finds of this character on the Black River started everybody hunting. It was all a gamble. On'.y now and then a mussel with the precious stone attached would be found, but when once discovered It was well worth the time employed. Those who would not wade loafed around on the banks and bid against one another for the untouched . shells brought In by the f-r-hermen. Bathing parties and pic .s at which the Interest centred In . rl fishingi were common. '. Many stories are told of lucky I .'in. A trio of tramps one day tried induce a ferryman to carry them n ross the river. He gruffly refused, telling them to go work and hunt pearls for a living.' They took his ad vice, and In about three hours had gathered several bushels of shells. Sitting down to open them, they dis covered in the fifth shell a pearl that sold for more than enough to buy all the early possessions of the ferryman. A lad playing about a boat used for pearl fishing discovered something shiny on the bottom. He showed it to a man whom be met on the street, and cheerfully accepted 10 for the pearL The man disposed of it to a friend for $50, who sold It later for four times that sum to a professional buyer, who -is reported to have re ceived several thousand dollars for it A business man who was on the erge of bankruptcy- went down to the river to put in a few days fish log while he contrived to think some way out of his difficulties. On the first day he found three pearls that he dis posed of for sufficient to pay all of his debts. Pearls worth $900 were found one afternoon by three young Northern women who had accepted an invita tion from a Southern hostess to join a bathing party with a pearl fishing attachment The proper dress for these functions, by the way, was the ordinary bathing dress and broad brimmed straw bats. Although the industry has waned greatly the last year, there are still numerous camps of fishermen to be seen dotting the river banks. The shallows wete, of course, first looted, and nowadays most of the work is done in the deeps. For this purpose oyster tongs are used, and the work is kept up most of the year. Dredging for pearls is very largely a business matter tuese days. Dredges are used on the eep places and on the bare the rlvr bottom Is ploughed up and the mussels brought in scows and opened. The shells are saved and sold to the button factories that have sprung up at every town and village. These shells more than pay the expenses of the work, and the pearls found are clear profit Several comfortable fortunes have been built up in this way. There are hundreds of button fac tories all along the upper Mississippi. WJierever there are sandbars and shallow places the work of dredging for mussels goes on. The supply is getting shorter every year, and to preserve the sources and propagate the muBsel the last Congress was In direct) to make a liberal appropriation. Shells by the carloads are shipped to the factories and there they are made into blanks und buttons. A big business in shipping the blanks to Germany has be.n built up In the last few years. Rule Where Men Burn. The rule of conduct on and beyon4 Aden, where men burn and die. If keep the head cool and the storaacl warm.. POISONING PRAIRIE DOGS They Are a Serious Pest to Western Farmers and Stockmen. Who woold think that the prairie dog, the shy and amusing little rodent that we like to watch before the door of his burrow at the loo, would ever become the subject of Government in tervention or endanger the success of stock raising? Vet such is the fact, says the Technical World. Out on the national forests which I'ncle Sam is guarding for the use of the public expert hunters have gone after the prairie dogs with zeal and poison and the work will go on yet more vigorously next year. In order to demonstrate the effectiveness of the work nn area of some 60.000 to 70.000 acres of actual dogtown was selected for the test by the United States Forest Service. From 80 to 90 per cent, of the dogs were killed with the first distribution of the pois on. The poison Is prepared by coating wheat with a preparation of strych nine, cyanide of potassium, anise oil and molasses. When a sufficient rjr.anity Is ready the poisoned wheat Is carried to the field of operations. There the stockmen gladly supply men and horses, and the wheat Is giv en out to the riders and distribution bt gins. Each rider carries the wheat In a tin pail supported by a gunny sack flung across his right shoulder and naming at his left side. Ills left hr.nd is free tor the reins. With nis rf f;li t hand he uses a tablespoon to r..e:mire out the poison ecu drop it Ri.ar the entiance of the holes. A little practice enables the men lo tlrop the wheat while keeping th?ir horses on a sharp trot By crossing i.ic tjwn to and fro, like a man sow .nr; rain. they can cover a large area i:i a surprisingly short time. H Is necessary to go over the r.ro'.:;;d a second time, and by spotting the occupied holes the remaining dogs win easily be killed with a very small amount of poison. The average cost an acre for the poisoning material is one and one-half cents. Prairie dogs are very cbnoxious to the stockmen, for they devour much grass and undermine the surface of the ground with their burrows. Where they establish themselves the destruc tion of the range is only a question of time. While it is hard to say just what amount of feed a prairie dog will consume In the way of grass, it has been - estimated by the United States Biological Survey that thirty two prairie dogs will consume as much grass as one sheep, or 256 dogs as much as one cow. Fully Equal. Aunt Mandy is an old colored wom an who for years has done washing for several families. She has bad several mantrimonial experiences, and when her last husband died one of her customers attempted to condole with her. ' "I was very sorry to hear of your husband's death, Aunt Mandy," she said. "Ya'as, ma'am," said Aunt Mandy. "He was a pow'ful good man." "What did he die of?" "Ah really don't know, ma'am." "You don't know! Gracious! Could not the doctor tell you?" "Ah didn't have no doctah, ma'am," said Aunt Mandy. "He jes -done died a natch'ral death." It wasn't long, however, before Aunt Mandy had another husband. "I hear you are married again," re marked her patron one day. "Ya'as, ma'am," giggled Aunt Man d). "Ah was done married las' Sun day." "And is your new husband equal to the last?" "Ya'as, lndeedy, ma'am." said Aunt Mandy. "He's jes as equal. If not equaller." Value of Snake Skins. It is said to be a hard matter to 6kln a dead snake ho that the ekln will re main in good condition; consequently, in many regions of the world where Rnakes are caught for the purpose of supplying the market with skins for pocketbooks, belts, etc., the snake Is s'.wiineJ alive, an operation which in flicts upon this arch enemy of man the most Intense pain. Some are skinned dead, but the difference In price of skins taken from the dead reptile and those from the one alive does not make the more humane n'.ethod popular. Dead snakes bring only from 2 to 5 cents, while live ones bring from 25 cents to $1. Sumatra has a number of snake sklu factories, as that tropical it land abounds in the ophidian species When a hunter brings in a live snake, on? operator ta!;es it Dy the neck and another by the tail, and the reptile is attached Ly the neck to a tree trunk. A sharp '.n'.fe Is used to cut the Fkln just be low the head, and then, while the n;!er holds the snake taut, the first operator peels the akin from the sc.nirming body. The reptile, minus It: skin, writhes in excruciating pain tor an hour or so before It dies. Traffic by Dog Team. Dog teams are plentiful in Sault Ste. Marie. The boys and girls drive tt.eui for pleasure and the older people use them to travel Into town from the surrounding country. They are al.so u.-.ed to drav loads of 400 to 500 pounds, and this they do with ease. They travel five or six miles an hour r.Ktl .seem to enjoy It Uoth Newfoundlands and St Ber nards are used. The Indians of this .eic'.on also drive dog teams, and still another interesting sight is the In-ri-u. rhl'dren out playing in the snow . ilrc-d In real Indian costume and v. i;h my tomahawks. SauU Ste. Ma rio correspondence Kansas City Star. Helpful Beaujy Hints -w t -r Row lo Accquire Poise la Walk- ln rmoui Beauty's Tea Rules of Health formulas Tor Clean sing Cream, Trecklts, Etc. The Proper Locatioa of (he Mirror. The first essential of graceful walk ing Is poise. The weight of the body must be adjusted over the bulls of the feet. In correct polsn, the chest always leads, the abdoiuun recedes, the back and head assume their right positions. It goes without saying that there can be no grace In a hasty walk. Haste causes Irregular and un certain movements of all portions of the body, detracts from a woman's dignity and makes rhythm Impossible. Activity and right use of the feet are the second essential of a grace ful walk. The feet have a double duty to perform in bearing the weight and propelling the body. When the standing position is right, one leg Is swung forward from the hip, the knee acting In harmony, and the ball of the foot touching first The weight is so quickly transferred that the heel makes no noise. Women who walk heavily leave the weight on the heel and are never graceful. The general saying that one should "walk on the balls of the feet' has led none peo ple to try not touching the heel at all. The result Is a mincing gait wholly without dignity or grace. The position of the feet should be straight The weight of the body be ing on one foot while the other is swinging forward, the strongest posi tion of the foot should be taken, which is practically straight. As children are always taught to "turn their toes out" this will surprise many. The carriage of the shoulders Is an Important element In graceful walk ing. Nervousness, self-consciousness and haste show In stiffness of the shoulders, also In the aggressive el bows and clasped hands. If the chest Is well up and forward, tho shoulders will take their natural position and the arms hang at the sides. Forget your shoulders and think only of your chest 1 H T Cleansing Cream. i T Oil of sweet almonds. 4 j. ounces; White wax, 1 ounce; T White vaseline, 1 ounce; Ex- X tract of violet 2 drams. Toilet Water. Elderflower water, 2 ounces; Dlstified water, 2 ounces. T Cosmetic Glove Paste. T Myrrh, 1 ounce; Honey, 4 j ounces; Yellow wax, 2 ounces; 4 Rose water, 6 ounces. Freckle Lotion. Corrosive sublimate, 2 grains; lemon juice, 1 ounce; Rose T water, 4 ounces; Powdered bo- $ rax, 1-2 dram. Apply once dally. T A Famous Beauty's Advice. Mme. Una Cavalierl, the famous grand opera singer, who has been called the moBt beautiful woman in the world, says that as a result of her experience in preserving youth and good looks she has framed ten sim ple rules which apply to every wom an seeking to retain her attractive ness: 1. When your mirror tells you you are not looking Well, rest 2. To keep the hair beautiful wash It once a week. 3. To keep the mouth young mas sage with the little fingers the lines of petulance from nostrils to Hps. 4. To have always a youthful con tour, keep the line of the jaw as thin as a knife edge. 5. To take away the ugly, middle aged redness of the nose, use hot compresses on it 7. To keep the tired lines away from the eyes, bathe the lids and skin about the eyes with water as warm as you can endure It. 8. To make the eyes always bril liant, bathe them as often as yoa do your face. 9. To avoid the multiplied chin, sleep with the head low, the lower the better. 10. To refresh the dry, withered skin bathe it often in water as warm as you can endure. "You see," she says, "they begin with 'rest' In practice they end with that. I might drop half of them and use rest instead. Rest Is beauty's magic." Where Is Your Mirror? One reason that girls are so often badly dressed as to their head and neck is the bad location of their mir ror. Every dressing table or mirror used for toilet purposes, should be so placed that It gets a strong light both night and day. Preferably the light should fall full upon It and the dress er when using the mirror, should sit with her back to the light One young woman who frequently appeared In public with a smudged face, to her great mortification, found that her dressing table was so placed that there was not enough light to re veal imperfections plainly seen by everyone else. Particularly If one makes up the face or is addicted to the use of pow der, the loeatlon of the mirror is im portant If oue must resort to art, it should at least be artistic and that Is nut of the question It there is not a strong light coming from behind ou the pictured face In the mirror. b.-.ii-fc MLbiCAL COIL. Wilt Give Goof Rot'u tt at Small Cost. Very IXMiMless tline lire many persons vim would ilk-, tu make nn induct nn colt tor medic.-) , hut ate deterred from fo doing by the belief tint the work la too iliilicult lor any one ! ut a skilled mechanic to jmlpt take Tills is a gieat mistake, liov. ,vr . s il Is quite possible for ahuosi nnyh-v!y to muse a coll that will u've tin,.! if. suits at a cost of but a lew t erns mid with the use of only the mii.-tt ord.nary tools. For the core there tuny be used Ha Iron bolt about three Inches limp iiti.l three-eighths of an inch in dlan.eicr. as shown at A In the ncco:npn:iy::u drawing. It Is a good plan to mften the bolt by heatlnc it red hot In s fire and allowing It to cool slowly. Make two thin wooden washers iitioin an inch and a quarter In dlainner, and glue them on to the bolt fo lorm a spool as shown at II, and sovcr the Iron between the heads with a wrap ping of two layers of paper glued on. The nut shown Is not necessary, lint makes a neat finish. The first part of the winding, or J primary coil, requires about hall an I ounce of No. 2U or No. 22 ri.iuti e cut ton-covered magnet wire. I'asr- iiu end of the wire through a small hnie In one of the heads, and wind on a smooth layer of the wire like thread on a spool. When tue opposite head Is reach.'d wind a ond layer of wire over the first out back to the place of beginning.. Cut off the wire and paRs the end tlirtitiuh a socond hole In the head near Mi first one, as shown at I). The exi ss of wire will be useful for connections. The next part of the winding or secondary coil, requires an ounce or two of No. "2 slnsle cotton, coveted mapnet wire. Finer wire uives more powerful results because of the me it er number of turns for a given weiahi but It Is rather delicate to handle In fore winding on any of this wire, pine on a wrapping of two or three layers or paper over the primary coll. to keep A Simple Medical Coil, the two coils entirely separate. The secondary wire need not be wound In layers, though care is required to avoid injuring the Insulation or break ing the wire by pulling it too tight The two ends may be left projecting, as shown at H, for connection to two handles or electrodes, and the coil may be protected by a final wrap ping of paper, as shown at C. One pole of a dry battery E is con nected to the tang of a large file F, and the other to one of tho primary terminals D. The remaining primary terminal O Is then lightly dragged along the surface of the file, thus making and breaking the circuit In rapid succession as the wire passes over the teeth. If the shocks re ceived from the handles are too strong, use a longer piece of wire at G; if too weak, ai'd another dry bat tery in series, or put more wire on the secondary. The Wise Owl. "In a hollow tree, during my vaca tion, I found two young owls," said a student. "I also found in the same nest two eggs. Puzzled that the mother owl thould have abandoned her setting ere its completion, I laid the subject before my farmer host. "The farmer to'.d me that cc.i.rj peop'.e know well that t'.ie ov.i, a,".c. hatching half her brood, leaver the other eggs to be hatched by the new born birds. These young are warm b'.ooded, they are helpless to leave the nest and in nine cares out of t(-:i they complete the hatch ad well :. the mother would have lone. "I'd consider this a superstition 1.' I hadn't seen a proof of it." Glasses to See Behind You. A little aparatus that enables a man to see behind him as he walks along the street has just been put on the market in Paris. It is called the periscope and is the invention of Count Soulie de Ccnac. The periscope consists of two tiny circular mirrors which can be attach ed to the outer edges of any ordinary eyeglasses. They swing on pivots which enable the wear to adjust them to his eyes, or to swins them down in a position In which they will be out of his range of vision. They can also be adjusted to tho focus of the eyes. The inventor thinks the periscope will prove valuable especially to de tectives who may desire to watch a person without his being aware of the fact that he is being watched. Magnetized Watches. People who travel dally on electric railways or cars often have great ditll culty In getting their watches to go properly, as the electricity magnetizes them. Here Is a simple test to show whether a watch Is magnetized or not. Place a small compass over the open part of the Inner case. If the watch is magnetised the pointer on the coir.pr.ss will revolve. If the point er remains quite still, the watch is not affected. mmm ANcgclable Preparation for As similating iticFoodandRcgula ting the Stomachs andDowcIs of Promotes Digcslion.ChccrfuV nessandltest.Contains neilttcr Opium. Morphine nor Mineral. KotNahcotic. HkMUSJm- 1 1 up, Aperfect Remedy forConstipa Oon , Sour Stomach.Diarrhoca Worms .Convulsions .Fcvcrish ncss find Loss OF SLEEP. Facsimile Signature or NEW YORK. lU .JULlt EXACT COPY OF WRAPPER BIG OFFER To All Our Subscribers The Great AMERICAN FARMER Indianapolis, Indiana. The Leading Agricultural Journal ot the Nation. Edited by an Able Corps of Writers. The American Farmer is fh t en - 7 , . i H i a P"tlon of lts TV vr t1"111" OI ,rurai peopie in every section of the United tates. It ClVeS tL:e farmt-r rnr1 W fm;i.. . ... . about aside from the humdrum Every Issue Contains an Original Poem by SOLON G00DE WE MAKE THE EXCEPTIONAL OFFER OF Two for the Price of The Oldest County Paper and THE AMERICAN Farmer BOTH ONE YEAR FOR $I.OO nllnMhinUnpTlleled?,ffer ismade to all new subscribers, and SiS&JJtSrS?" andren6W Wlthin thir a THE COLTTMBIAX. Bloomsbur Pa. Die profit of a gold mine di-penda, not on the anion nt of rock crushed under the HtHinps luit upon the amount of gold which can be extracted from the rock. In a similar way the value of food winch is eaten does not depend ou me quantity which in taken Into the stomach but upon the amount of nour ishnient extracted from it bv the or gans of nutrition and digestion. When these orguiin are diseased thev fail to extract the nourishment in RiiHieient quantities to supply the needs of the several organs of the body, and these organs cannot work without nourish ment. The result is heart 'trouble,'' liver "trouble," and niauv another ail ment. Dr. Pierce's Golden Medical Discovery, acting on every organ of the digestive and nutritive system, restores it to health and vigor. It cures diseases remote from the stomach through the stomach in which they originated. Golden Medical Discovery" contalus neither alcohol nor narcotics. A fine new line of Weddinp in vltations just received at this office. CASTOR I A For Infanti and Children. The Kind You Have Always Bought Bears the Signature of St For Infants and Children. The Kind You Have Always Bought Bears the Signature of In Use For Over Thirty Years i THB f WTftUft OMMNT. MCW Von OlTT. nnitr T it.n, t J "'""j1 i-rtiiu journal pur- yn anl has taken the leading of routine duties. One: THE COLUMBIAN Guage Wine by Beetles. The appearance of great numbers of "golden beetles" in Austrian vineyards this summer has been welcomed with rejoicing by the proprietors, for it is a universally credited superstit'on that the ad vent of these iusects is followed by a good wine harvest. This year their belief has been justified, for it is calculated that the yield from the vi nes will be twice as great as in 190S. As many as 15 and 20 bunches of grapes 1 an be counted ou each plant in vine yards in the ueighborhood of Vien na. A U .rnrciy Civ's " I . ;.c !. CI. 1)3 .leliel ;. oaca. Itck-unoM, SOO-.Ul.'!?, lll'Uls UUil lUi.tOjt.1 the ilisei-u'd int!:i. bnin.-r KuVi-f oiu C-. ;t ;h 1.:. 1 I'tivi's 'v . h Col l ia the H I jukl.!y., 1U-. More j the Senses of l ists uud S:u. ll. :l size 50 cts. , utDru(- cists or I'v in, ill T,. luiuul form, 75 ri'uts. AW PHOTO mm m FEVER Uy Brothers, SU War ruu tilroet, New York.