Cameron County press. (Emporium, Cameron County, Pa.) 1866-1922, September 04, 1902, Page 7, Image 7

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    CARE OF THE TEETH.
To Preserve nnd Ilencitlfy Them
fehould Hp Hit* Aim of Kvery
Man. Woman and Child.
Everybody admires a pood' set of
teeth, and the owner of such is always
to be envied. An excellent cam
phorated tooth powder which will not
destroy thn enamel of the teeth, and
yet will render them white, is made of
7 drs. of precipitated chalk, one-half
dr. of powdered camphor and 1 dr. of
powdered orris root.
it is not sufficient to use only a tooth
powder; a liquid dentifrice is pleas
ant and has a beneficial influence upon
the gums. To make one, take 2 o/.s. of
borax, a quart of hot water and one
teaspoonful each of tincture myrrh
nnd spirits of camphor. Dissolve the
borax in hot water, and when the wa
ter is cool odd the other ingredients
am bottle them for use. A few drops
usee in a little water forma delightful
Svash,
It. is a mistake to suppose that Ihe
teeth of every person should be of the
fame whiteness. The variation of
color is largely a constitutional re
mit.
Yellow teeth, it is said, are usually I
Indicative of bodily vigor, and very
pearly white ones of a more fragile
const itut ion.
There is only one general rule to of
fer respecting the care of tiie teeth,
and that is that they be kept immacu
lately clean and in perfect health.
Their color then matters nothing, for
their condition will prove that they
ere well attended to. Should the
gums be tender and spongy, the gen
eral health, upon which the condition
of the teeth so much depends, should
be made the subject of inquiry.
A healing and soothing tooth pow
der is made of precipitated chalk 1
oz., of powdered borax one-half oz..
of powdered myrrh one-fourth oz..
and the same quantity of powdered
orris root. —X. Y. Journal.
READING GAS METERS.
Careful Housekeeper* Should Keep
an Eye on Gas Ilill* to Prevent
OvereharKlnw.
The gas and water accounts, which
form so large a part of the year's
expenses, should be as closely scru
tinized by the careful housekeeper as
are the grocer 3' and provision bills,
and care should be taken to see that
»o overcharge is made. To do this,
the principles on which the meters
are operated should first be learned.
The accompanying figure represents
FACE OF GAS METER.
the face of a gas meter. It will be
noticed that the hands of alternate i
dials move in the same direction. I
The dial at the top registers frac
tions of a cubic foot and is used for !
test purposes only. The figures on '
the right-hand dial represent hun- I
dreds of cubic feet and when the I
hand has made one complete revolu- j
tion a thousand feet will have
passed through. Each thousand feet
will be checked on the lower dial un
til 10,000 in reached, when the hand j
of the. last dial moves one point. It i
should be noted that the hands can- |
not be reset to zero and that, conse- j
qucntly, each reading should he pre
served until the next one is taken
and the former deducted from it.
The dotted lines represent the posi
tion of the hands at a previous read- j
ing of the meter, namely 3,800 cubic
feet. The hands now indicate 0,400
cubic feet. Minus .'(,800 cubic feet
would give 2,000 cubic feet as the
amount of gas consumed during ihe
quarter; at $1.50 per 1,000 feet, your
bill should be $3.90.
A water meter is read in precisely
the same way but the registration is
more minute. The first dial is used
only for testing. The next registers
single feet, then tens, hundreds and
toon. if, after deducting as shown
above, you find you ha v.* used 2,526
cubic feet of water during the year,
you must multiply this number by
.748 to find the number of gallons,
namely 18,804 gallons. This amount
multiplied by the rate per thousand
gallons (unless you pay for water
by the faucet) will show the amount
of your water bill.—Ernest It. Lowe,
in Good Housekeeping.
rue of l.lnen In Rotation,
Carelul housewives see that their
pieces of linen are used in rotation,
for if one be on the table oftener
than another it is pretty sure to
wear out long before the rest of the
set.
II rxi iip fort riiffur Indnitrj,
The milk of a single Roquefort
■heep will in a year make about 30 to 40
po-.inds of cheese. In that district
of France there are about 8,000 sheep
4«'ote<l to the cheese industry.
MRS. CLARENCE MACKAY. ]
Sew t«rk Society Leader WUo Is
Called the Mont Kxtravuuant
Woman in America.
Mrs. Clarence Mackny, the dashing
leader of New York society, with a
fortune of almost $40,000,000 at her
command, is credited with being the
most extravagant young matron in
America. She spends annually more
than $30,000 on her wardrobe, and
this does not include her lavish ex
pennitures for jewelry, which is her
pet fad. With an assured Christmas
present every year of $25,000 for pin !
money and regular allowances on an
equally liberal basis, she is easily in
position to lead the younger set of
women in New York in the matter of j
extravagance.
Mrs. Maekay leans perceptibly to
ward fads, and one of her latest
MRS. CLARENCE MACKAY.
creations in this direction is to be
found in her magnificent country
home on Long Island, comprising a
mansion and 700 acres of land, which
was presented to her by her father
in-law, John W. Maekay. In this
house Mr. Maekay has had construct
ed the most wonderful bath that has
ever been seen in America. It wag
brought over from Italy and is cut
from a solid block of marble, which j
cost something like. $20,000. The pool
is sunk in the floor and five broad |
marble steps lead down to it. The
water spouts from the mouths of ex- j
quisitely carved marble dolphins. An- j
other feature of the bathroom is a |
great fireplace built into the side j
wall of the room. Each of the other j
25 bathrooms in the house has a lux- j
urious Pompeiian bath let down in <
the marble floor in the same way.
It was Mrs. Mackay's own idea that
each of her 30 servants should have
a separate room. The rooms art
small, but are sunshiny and comfort- j
able.
Although spending fabulous sums j
every year upon gowns and the grat- |
ifieation of literary whims regarding
fads, Mrs. Maekay is by no means
neglectful of the more serious prob- j
leuis of life, says the Chicago Trib- !
une. She gives fully as much to ,
charity as she spends for her own \
pleasure, and makes it a rule never j
to buy herself a bit of finery with- I
out giving the equivalent to some de- j
serving person or institution. Mrs. j
Mack'iy is a new type of the fashion- |
able woman, and she has attracted j
no end of attention in the east—in ;
fact, throughout the United States. j
People stare at her so much when
she drives out in New York that she '
wears a veil covered with heavy lace ,
flounces that completely hides her
features like a mask. She is a beauty
with dark hair, dark eyes, and an ex
quisite figure. Her gowns are the
best that can be bought. Jewelry is
her pet fad, and she has one of the
finest collections of jewels in Amer
ica. One ring is a Hindu curio, which
cost $37,000. It covers three fingers
| and is of old yellow Chinese gold set j
i with rare rubies, diamonds and em- j
j eralds. Among her furs is a single
! coat of sealskins and sables which
j cost $7,000.
Mrs. Maekay is justly reputed to be \
; the most original woman in New
! York society. She furnishes the sur
prises, fashions and fads for the
young members of Gotham's smart
set, and the distinction of having in
| augurated baby parties in this conn- j
| try belongs to her. She is the mis- j
| tress of one of the most beautiful
country homes in America, and yet
her friends say she has not been \
spoiled by all this lavishness. She j
always has time to be pleasant to
j everyone, and, although she enter- I
' tains constantly, she never neglects !
: her little daughter for society.
Stationery is one of Mrs. Mackay's I
many fads. It is all in violet, and, be
cause she thinks a red two-cent
s tamp is inharmonious on a violet en
velope, she uses the three-cent stamp
instead. ,
Recipe for a Iluir tVnuli.
A useful hair wash, especially for
those people who easily catch cold, j
is made by taking five cents' worth j
of camphor and borax (both should ;
be powdered), and pouring over them !
a pint of boiling water. Let this stand :
till cold and then bottle. When wash- j
ing the hair add a tablespoonful of :
this to the warm water.
A Sen Hon of Monoid ram a.
Everything nowadays must be
monogrammed, and so must, o1
course, table linen. A dainty initial
in the corner is worked with wash
silk or fine white linen thread. If
the family has a crest or coat of arms
it may lie substitute?! for the mono
gram. provided the owner of the relic i
of feudalism is sufficiently snobbish }
to care to flaunt it.
tut Linen hy the Thread.
Before cutting l'nen or damask, be I
sure to draw a thread, for otherwise
no matter how straight it may fold,
it will probably only look so till it is
washed. If cut by the thread you
may be sure of its washing straight.
CAMERON COUNTY PRESS, THURSDAY, SEPTEMBER 4, 1902.
DIVIDING ROUND SILO.
Solnfion of n Tlckllxh Qnrntlon Tho<
lias ru».7.1c«l Many I'ecdt r»
Mure or Leu,
A reader from Canada asks for the
| best method of dividing' a round silo
' which recently came into his posses
sion. Should the partition be putin i
j crossways of the openings or extend
j from the openings? If the partition !
; extends from the opening, shall it ex- |
! tend from the center of the opening or j
from one edge? Pigs 1, 2 and 3 show
the three plans. By putting the par- J
tition, as in Figs. 1 and 2, the silage
from one-half must be thrown across i
; the other, which means much extra
| work in emptying a silo. The parti
j tion should be placed as in Pig. 3, and
I good doors made to fit the opening in
j each side. Use paper, or what is bet- i
I ter. felt to make the joints air-tight.
The reader also asks if it would not I
I be all right to have the boards cut
| and putin the partition as the silo is
I filled. It would be impossible to make a
| partition air-tight when putin in such
; a manner. Too much care cannot be
taken in putting in such a partition.
The ends will have to have much work
where joined to the walls or air will
get through when one side is empty.
The work should be done in a good and I
substantial manner, as there is great
pressure. Both sides should be tilled
simultaneously and well compacted at
GO®
r/o.j
OHIH
Fro. 4 F~/Cr S F'/tr, Q
METHODS OF DIVIDING SILO,
all times. It would break down the
best made partition if one side was
putin at a time. After it is well set
tled if one side is taken out the press
ure is not so great.
When taking out the first slide, have
a large number of braces ready the
proper length and as fast as the silage
is used, putin the braces. Pig. 4 shows
the braces in position from the sides
of the silo to the partition. These
braces should have some pieces at the
ends running the opposite direction
to the material against which the
brace is to support. That ss, if the
silo is stave and the partition horizon
tal to the brace, the end nieces should
be as in Fig. 5. If the timber of the i
Jutside of the silo is horizontal, the j
brace should be a 6 in Fig. 6. When |
one side of the silo is empty, there is |
no danger of the wall giving way if
these precautions are taken. Next year, '
when filling, the braces as tvell as the
end pieces, should be taken out and j
laid away for another year. By this j
method, the man with a small herd can
build a moderate sized silo and have !
silage through the dry time, as well j
as winter at a very small outlay of
noney.—Orange Judd Farmer.
THE FIG IN AMERICA.
Vast Arena In Thin Country Said tc
He Especially Adapted to
Grow Iri ir It.
There is little reason to doubt
: that America will become in the no
' distant, future one of the greatest
; fig-producing countries in the world,
j Previous to about three years ago
j the growing of figs in this country
I was carried on with very indiffer
ent success, though trees were
planted in California, New Mexico,
! Arizona and some other places.
I About three years ago the govern
j ment took up the matter and intro
i duced from abroad the fig-fertiliz
i ing insect, blastophaga grossorum.
The insect was put to work in the
fig orchards about Fresno, Cal. As
a result two tons of Smyrna figs
were raised, dried and placed on the
j market, tests being made by chem
i ists and fruit, experts showing these
j figs to be superior to the imported j
! product. The crop last year on j
these same trees amounted to over j
50 tons. The insect has been intro- I
duced now, into other localities and j
the department of agriculture holds |
itself in readiness to supply these
insects to any grower that has trees
of a bearing age. In the light of j
these results it seems likely that I
we may see in the next 20 years an j
enormous development of the fig- I
growing industry. There are vast
areas in this country that are adapt
ed to the growing of such trees as
the fig and those localities will with
out doubt be the scenes of extensive
cultural operations with the aid of
| science, which the American farmer
! has so often and so susccessfully
called to his aid.—Farmers' Review.
Gnwlat Lettaee I nder Cloth.
Lettuce of especial tenderness ready
for use in early spring may be grown
under a covered cheese cloth. Thus it
does not require much attention and
comparatively little water. Pull oui
the weeds a few times and enjoy first
class early lettuce. After this' sup
ply gives out the thinnings from the
rows of the various early varieties
started early from s«>ed in open
ground. Plants are left standing
every four or five inches apart to make
nice litada. Tliejr furnish the next sup-
Pl/. .
A FAMILY AFFAIR.
t*Ter (Is.l Two Ilrotherft-ln-I.a%v
on tlie Jury and Was Sure of
Dlsuiireement.
"I ( had business in the far west last win.
ler," said a Boston lawyer the other dnj - ,
according to the Post, "and while 1 was
•topping in a small town for a day or two
a man wan tried for stealing a horse. I
went over to court to see how they put
things through, and closely followed the evi
dence on both sides. There wasn't the
shadow of a doubt in my mind that the
prisoner was guilty, and that evening I
*«id to his lawyer:
" 'You'll lose your rase to-morrow. The
inrv must certainly convict.'
' 'Oh, I don't know,' he replied.
"'\ou dot't hope to get him off, do
you?'
i " 'Well, mavhe not, but they'll surely
bo a disagreement.'
| "'1 shouldn't ovunt on that if I had the
| case.'
i "'But I do, you know,' he replied.
| I've got two on the jury,
1 and you don't suppose they are going back
| on the family, do you;'"
j "They didn't," laughed the narrator.
: "Next day the case was closed, and the
; jury disagreed."
Iter Kxiiertneasi
"T* your typewriter an expert?"
Well, rather. \\ hy, she has the riflioe
ma turmoil.more than half the time."
How is that art indication of an expert
typowritist?"
j ' l . I didn't say she was an export type
i wntist. She's an expert flirt."—Chicago
Post.
Mr. Henry A. Salzer, of La Crosse, Wis.,
whose 'Salzers Seeds' are famed the world
oyer, has sailed lor Kurope, accompanied by
his wife. He will dive into the heart of
liujsia and Hungary ai'iter new seed novel
tics.
To IlaVe and to Hold.—Tess—"Jack told
i me he was going to propose to a girl 1 knew
j last night. Jess —" Yes, and he 11 never do
| it again." less—"Why, who was the girl?"
Jess—"l, and I accepted him."—Philadel
phia Press.
To Cure a Cold In One Day-
Take Laxative Bromo Quinine Tablets. All
aruggistsrcfuiulmoneyif itfailsto cure. 25c-
The next time you think of applying to
: \ man for help, remember that he probably
has a load, too.—Atchison Globe.
Piso's Cure cannot be too highly spoken of
is a cough cure.—J. W. O'Brien, 322 Third
Ave., N., Minneapolis, Minn., Jan. G, I'JOO.
"Here's where I fall to work," said th»
well digger when the rope broke.—lndianap
olis News. r
i Disposition is more than position— Rain's
Horn.
Be wisely worldly, but not worldly *ise
• —Quarles.
Better a fair failure than a falsesuccess.—
Ram's Horn.
The way to find trouble is to lose your
head. —N. Y. Herald.
Life is one continuous round of unfinished
business.—Chicago Daily News.
Duties of other people are always doubly
clear to us.—Chicago Daily News.
_ , •; —"
Don't say you haven't time. You have all
of it there is on tap.—Chicago Daily News.
Truth is as impossible to be soiled by any
outward touch as the sunbeam. —Milton.
It is not permitted to the most equitable
of men to be a judge in is own case. —Pascal.
Money is sought only as a means to an
end which nobody has ever yet attained by
this means.—Puck.
Requisite.—"Think he's better fitted for
Congress t linn anyone else in your district,
do you?" "I should say so; he's a natural
born congressman. Why, he can take any
old anecdote, twist it around a little and
tell it as if it had been an actual experience
of his own." —Philadelphia Press.
"Ping-pong," said the lady in the golfing
skirt, "is just like golf." "lit is just like
tennis," declared the lady in the linen suit.
"You're both wrong," observed the heavy
set gentleman who w as wiping his brow and
breathing with evident effort. "It's ji*t
like hard work."—lndianapolis News.
It Didn't Matter Anyway.
The following explanatory note accom
panied a Liberty (Mo. I young man's wedding
gift to a friend: "*'My dear girl —You will
find in the box a thingamajig, whicf.i has
something to do with eating, it's a cross be
tween a harpoon and a hayfork. It may be
for spearing pickles or stacking chopped cab
bage. Anyway, you will be so happy that
you won't care."—Chicago Chronicle.
AVfcgcfable Prrparationfor As- »
similaling lite Food andßcgula- §
ling the Slowacits andßowels of
Promotes Digestion.CheerfuP- I
ness and Rest .Contains neither 'l
Opium, Morphine nor Mineral. m
TS'OT NARCOTIC.
fbrif* aroidArSAMl TLriTCIMI "«
f\anpfiut Seal" \ JR'
jilx.Sf/uut * 1
ilocha tle Salts I Oil
Jti\L<+ Seed + i
jypfjeriiwtl - . )
Jil C:utonnieS_jto » I
M&Jp Sf«eL - 1
Ctanfwd .tiranr I
Ji6U*y/*en flavor / 'fi
Aperfect Remedy forConslip.-)- 3
lion, Sour Stomach, Diarrhoea a,
Worms Convulsions .Feverish- &
ness and Loss or Sleep. 112;
Facsimile Signature of
-4
XKW YORK. 9
t EXACT COPY OF WRAPPER. j|
i— -eriS^
AN ITALIAN CAPTAIN
Cured by Pe=ru=na of Catarrh of the
Stomach After Doctors Failed.
Hon. J. D. Botkin, Congressman from
Kansas, Writes an Interesting Letter.
CAPTAIN O. BERTOLETTO.
Captain O. I'ortoletto of the Italian
Barque "Lincelles," in a recent letter
from the chief office of the Italian
Barque Lincelles, Pensa cola, Fla., writes:
"/ have suffered for several years
with chronic catarrh of the stomach.
The doctors prescribed for me without
my receiving the least benefit. Through
one of your pamphlets I began the use
of Peruna, and two bottles have en
tirely cured me. / recommend Peruna
to all my friends."—O. Bertoletto.
In catarrh of the stomach, as well as
catarrh of any part of the body, Peruna
is tlie remedy. As has been often said
if Peruna will cure catarrh of one part,
it will cure catarrh of any other part of
the body.
Catarrh is catarrh wherever located,
and the remedy that will cure it any
where will cure it everywhere.
| SKIN-TORTURED |
I BABIES I
Bleep for skin-tortured Babies and rest for |pfi
tired, fretted Mothers in warm baths with
J CUTICURA SOAP, and gentle anointings with ||||
CUTICURA OINTMENT, purest of emollients
and greatest of skin cures, to be followed in
severe cases by mild doses of CUTICURA RE
SOLVENT PILLS. This is the purest, sweetest,
most speedy, permanent, and economical of
pyj treatments for torturing, disfiguring, itch- ]gi§
ing, burning, bleeding, scaly, crusted, and
y, Y* pimply skin and scalp humours, with loss of
hair, of infants and children, as well as adults. «
|S| MILLIONS OF MOTHERS ||J
pHSjI Use CUTICURA SOAP, assisted by OtmerTßA OINTMENT, the great
shin cure, tor preserving, purifying, anit boautlfylng the skin, and K§§s
for all the purposes of the t"ll«t, bath, and nursery. Millions of §3/^2
rTfy, Women use C'UTiciraA SOAP In the form of baths for annoying Irrl-
tatlons, Inflammations, and ulcerative weaknesses, and for many
sanative, antiseptic purposes. iaiS}
Ml COMPLETE TREATMENT FOR EVERY HUMOUR
\ Consisting of CUTICCRA SOAP, to cleanse the skin; CuTictJßA
OINTMENT, to heal the skin; and CDTICCUA HESOLVENT PILL*, to -2F
(Ssj® cool and cleanre the blood. A HINUI.K SKT IS often sufficient to cure
the moat torturing, disfiguring, Itching, burning, and scaly humours,
nwhej, and Irritations, with loss of hair, when all else falls.
I*4 \lrv Crnorm KBMIDIKS &r® »old tfcroogbont th« world. Hrltiah IVpo4« '/J-'A. Char
t' X* terhotiM 14)., l/ondnn. rrwnch I >epoti i de 1A I'aix, Pari*. Tom« Dui'o A.IB &
cf *4 Caxu. Coaik>U boeloa. . 5
ta&A }e"'-xi
For Infants and Children.
The Kind You Have
Always Bought
Bears
rv Jft* In
ru X Use
U» For Over
Thirty Years
▼MI CKNTAUft COMMIir. KK«r VOU* CITY
wwwa—— flpoa
Tlie following letter from Congress
man Botkin speaks for itself:
HOUSE OF REPRESENTATIVES, £
WASHINGTON, I). C. }
Dr. S. B. ITartman, Columbus, O.:
My Dear Doctor—lt gives me pleasure
to certify to the excellent curative <|uuli
ties of your « » « T
medicines—Pe- i i
I runaandMana- J T
1 in. I have been J J
afflicted more I 4HX X
quarter of a J 1
century with i \,\(SL Ji\ j I
| catarrh of the j J !
stomach iiul t *
constipation. A i J
residence in I ?
\\ as hiiig ton 1 T
these troubles, i JK S&lr i
I A fewbottlesof ♦ ' • " y
[your medicine • • • 1
j have giren me almost complete relief,
and I am sure tliat a continuation of
them w ill effect a permanent cure. Pe
j runa is surely a wonderful remedy
for catarrhal affections.—J. D. Botkin.
This is a ease of catarrh of the stomach
| which had run for twenty-five years,
i according to his statement, and Peruna
| has at once come to his relief, promptly
accomplishing for liiiu more benefit than
i he had been able to find in all other
! remedies during a quarter of a century.
I It stands to reason that a man of
i wealth and influence, like a Congress
! man of the great United States, has left
j no ordinary means untried and no stone
unturned to find a cure.
If such cures as these do not verify
the claim not only that dyspepsia is duo
to catarrh of the stomach, but also that
Peruna will cure catarrh of the stom
ach, it is impossible to imagine how any
evidence could do so.
If you do not derive prompt and satis
factory results from the use of Peruna,
write at once to I)r. Ilartman, giving a
full statement of your case, and he will
be pleased to give you his valuable ad
vice gratis.
Address Dr. ITartman, President of
The Ilartman Sanitarium, Columbus, O.
THE UNIVERSITY OF NOTRE DAME,
NOTRE DAME, INDIANA.
FULL COURSES IN Classics, Letter?. Eco
nomic.'; and History, Journalism, Art, Science,
Pharmacy, Law, Civil, Mechanical and Elcc
tricnl Engineering, Architecture.
Thorough Preparatory and Commercial
Courses.
Rooms Free to all students who have com
pleted the studies required for admission into th«
Junior or Senior Year of any of the Collegiate.
Courses.
Rooms to Rent, moderate charge to student*
over seventeen preparing for Collegiate Courses.
A limited number of Candidates for the Eccle
siastical state will be received at special rates.
s«t. Edward's Hall, for boys under 13 years, ia
unique in the completeness of its equipment.
The 50th Year will open .September 9, 190 a.
Catalogues Free. Address
REY. A. MORRISSEY. C. S. C., President.
[rupture |
1 ELASTIC TRI
B HANSON TRUS3 CO., 244 Sixth Ave.. N.Y. jf
r-[HAZARD]
In constant use all over 1
the world for the last sixty- I
six years. The oldest and I
I GUN POWDERI
Allen's Ulcerine SaEve
t hrnnlr I'lMrt, Hun# fleer*. Hrrnfulmi* fleer*, ▼■rirmw
Hon, IndoUnt Cleer*, lUrrurlal llr#r*, White N«*»llli.«. Ill*
Fever Horn, *n4 all .or, • of lon* M**rfln«. »•
fellare. Bj ■ Vfcc and Mr. J. I . ALLhN.YH 1 aui, Mtur.
7