SffIENCE CAME THE l-mUJEBS § • -" " • 1 ' ii'rlxrM'rf , t^>^' < ,^v w MK cw ( w ✓ < v'»"'■ «t > \ /- tfCUSI DjC# TAtf /VrGU/vrjCOQA' Jl/Wf. \ - ✓ \ StfA//Vr. vjA^lL ' W \ £AWT/C.£MrtPaSfDart I jwor/tr/i « ❖ « «rr HENEVER your vacation rambles have taken you to one of the northern states > F ) of the country, you have \V L) no doubt often been struck by the sight of some un- , —usually largo bowlders Iperched on the top of a < mountain, or resting, muy wyl be, in such a nicely bal- YV * anced position by the very edge of the sea that a dashing wave may rock it to and fro, writes G. N. Collins in the National Geographic Magazine. Examine one of these bowlders more closely and you will find sev eral things to distinguish it from otht-rs that you may have noticed in other parts of the country. Should the rock on which the bowlder lies be bare of soil, it will often be found to be of a different kind than that of which the bowlder is composed. Thus the bowlder itself may be of granite |and rest on a surface of limestone, Ishale or sandstone. You will also often find this bare ; rock polished to a remarkable degree, or marred by scratches, and even deep grooves running in a more or less parallel direction, known as glacial •striae. To understand how a block of gran- Ite as large as a small cabin could b« lodged on top of a mountain when there Is no similar rock within a hun dred miles or more, we must trace Its history back to a time at least 200,000 years ago, when the geologic period called the tertiary was drawing to ltß close. The first fact to attract our atten tion, could we have taken a blrdseye view of the northern part of our con tinent at that time, would be Its great er extent than at present. Looking eastward we would see the shoreline extending in places a hundred miles beyond the shoreline of today, and In v«'.n would we scan for the Islands, bays and reaches that now lend such enchantment to our picturesque coast. Northward the land probably stretch ed unbroken over the present arctic archipelago, and connected on the east by way of Greenland, Iceland and the Scandinavian peninsula with Eu rope anil on the west by closing of Bering strait with Asia. This circumstance had a very Impor tant bearing on the fauna of that day, as it enabled the animals from the one continent to cross to the other. Ma king a closer Inspection of the land- Bcai>o beneath us. wo would be sur prised at the total absence of the smaller lakes that now are its most characteristic feature. Even the great lakes were missing, with the possible exception oT Lake Superior, while In the valleys In which these latter now lie flowed rivers belonging to one or more systems. The mountain groups of today we would recognlre at once, notwithstand ing their somewhat more nigged out line, and the same would be *rue in the case of the rivers. While we would see a number of them In strange cour es, the master streams •we would know at first glance For millions of years these had been cut ting their channels undisturbed, until at the close of the tertiary a new Im petus was imparted to them, owing 'o the recent rise of land and the ever lncri a-lug humidity of the climate. So we would probably see thuni tur bulent and fwolleii and the sldea of their water courses often precipitous stid d, overhung In places by great ledges "i'd loose blocks readily dislodged by the least for< e The climate over the whole conti nent was seuiltroplcal, or at least tem perate, utid such plann as lh«> big and gri at red W«"«l* of t dlfurnts grew as far north as On • uland and Ireland. And thic.wgh the almost < ndlees woods of th* n> ith rt tin d hi ids of masto don and other herbltrore of g-e*t sue, together with such b gcoluKi linn U i<>ko»ied, that must of the ih'-n existing aitln aland plant forms pushed south before Its advain e. h,ul not tliuo enough to adapt th« msi Iv• tto their new environment, and theiel I. iMHau.. grnatly altered or «iit ruiinalud As yet theie has Veen no good re» soil asetgiieiS fur a shange that la a roO!|*ar-ad, you have the prlvl leg- of hulling hlia before the crim inal courts ns one guilty of the crime of showing contempt for the whole house of parliament And before he leaves the Old llulley hew 111 fc< very, very sorry If. on th«t oilier hand, It Is you who so far forget yourself tta to punch the commoner's head, he can summont you. just as he would any one else, at the police court, Hut If, when you are there, you breathe out threatening)) and »launhter against him, and te|| him exactly what you will do to him when you get lilin out side, yuu can do so for as long a» you plea** The magistrate has no puvter to bind »ou over to keep the |» ace, or commit you fur contempt of cuurt uu* of which things he wuuld certainly do If your name did not appear on the register of the bouse of lords Hut these are nut the only advan tages your tank glvts yuu la ib« court* If you are turn > ra»4 In a chain • t y case and have to appear in the wtines* hoi. your »unl * mild If you *tahs4 it.he taken aa equivalent Mr another man * oath- If anyone um« patkuuai «tui«noe to your woaih CAMERON COUNTY PRESS, THURSDAY, DECEMBER 15, 1910. difference in time at which the vari ous ice centers reached their greatest development, we will be very nearly the truth In saying that from the southern limit, shown on the map, northward the Ice lay In one unbroken expanse, with the exception of the so called driftless area and possibly one of the highest mountain peaks in the east. It is calculated that its thick ness at the two eastern centers must have been something like 6,000 to 10,- 000 feet. On its way from the north the ice mass gathered to itself immense quan tities of soil and loose rock which were carried along with it. Occasion ally huge blocks of rock from moun tain slopes and stream bottoms were clutched in the firm grip of the ice and carted for hundreds of miles. Fre quently the ice would lift great bowl ders from the bottom of a valley to the top of a mountain. Presently the ice began to retreat before a more congenial climate. It was not at first, however, a steady re treat, as not less than four times the Ice again advanced after having al most vanished, and each time it was followed by animals and plants adapt ed to the semtfrigld climate at its edge. During one of these lnterglaclal epochs man appeared upon the scene. Hut as the ice melted and disap peared the earth and rocks which it carried were dumped, sometimes at an even mantle, but more often in hills and ridges. man or your footman yeu can get very heavy penalties against him in the courts. You cannot be arrested except for an Indictable offense. For any offense less serious you can, of course, be summoned to appear. Rut the police man is not allowed to use in your case his usual efficient method of making sure that people do actually appear. If the offense is serious, however, you • ■an be arrested in the ordinary way. j Then you can claim to bo tried by a Jury of your fellow peers. If a society paper gossips about you In a way you do not like, the proprie tors are guilty of the crime of "scan dalum mugnutuin," and you should find it easy to make them regret that , ever they were born. I,nstly, you need not buy stamps for your letters unless you like. Peer* are still entitled to use the old method of "franking" letters. Hut your i friends would not bless you when they received letters with only your prl- ; vate murk Instead of a stamp. The postman would probably camp out on the doorstep till he hnd that two pence. Though the privilege of "franking" still exists, theoretically, for peers, the business-like postof tlre would proL.ibly refuse to recog nise It.- Stray Stories. Csre of Children's Tseth. The l.ancot, lit a strong plea for butter cure of the teeth of Kugllsh chil dren, which, It says, "Is u matter of the first Importance to the country." declares thai "tooth brush drill Is of llttlo value when carried out during school hours; to be of value It must be carried out at the proper times, the i t Important of ail being the last thing before going to rest." This med ical authority thinks, also, that "a well organised crusade throughout the country on the Importance of the teeth and the technique of their proper care would be followed In a generation by an litiiueie e Improvement In (he health of the nation, and from th« point of view of the i-ooiOatuitt »efvtesa, by an enormous decrease lit the percentage of recruits rejected fur defective te. I h " Qsts 112 him Hunnlng. Will the bllallieia Nieu of this t'ottl tuuuily subsidise a Marathon meet?" "How will a Marathon help the busiM«>** taea V "In man) ways The telegraph com paii) ought to be Interested l.txik I!.* It Will sllWiUlute tk« UltMMeUgei boy Ik" PROFITABLE TO RAISE CALVES DURING WINTER They Do Not Cost as Much as Those Born In the Springe Owing to the Absence of Heat and Flies— How They Are Mannered. Calves dropped In the late fall and the early part of winter can be raised at less cost than calves dropped in spring. Spring; calves do not receive much benefit from grass the first sea son, because for some six week 3 after birth the ruminating stomach is unde veloped; then, again, the summer heat and the plague of flies are a serious drawback to healthy growth. In the fall and during the wiLter months, out door work not being so pressing, more time for feeding and caring for the calves may be given. The calves bfing fed mostly on milk and swill, mill feed and oatmeal food, and kept In a warm, well-lighted box stall and under the management of a careful hand, will make a strong growth throughout the winter, and by April they will be large Content. enough to turn out to pasture and do well on the dry rations of the following winter. The fall calf, properly fed and cared for, can be served when 16 to 18 months of age, coming fresh the latter part of the second winter. The calf should be left with the cow for several days after birth, as the milk of the cow, which is of a turbid, yel lowish color, unfit for human food, but having medicinal qualities, wisely de signed by nature to free the bowels and Intestines of the new-born animal from the mucous, excrementatious matter always existing In the stomach of the calf after birth. This milk should never be given to older calves, as It would produce scours. For the first few days give fresh, newly drawn milk CARING FOR FARM HORSES By Observing: a Few Precautions Furmer May Avoid Loss of Time, Expense und In jury to Animals. (By H E. KINGMAN > A horse cannot do satisfactory work with shoulders that pain him every time he takes a step. The horse may j be looked upon as a machine that Is < xpected to do so much work, and If some of the mechanism is out of order then the amount of work Is lessened, liut, also, the animal must be looked upon as a creature with feeling and ambition, taking pride in Its worn, that is a willing, obedient und therefore valuable servant, und should be proper ly cured for. The tirst thing of importance to con- Mder In the draught horse Is the col lar. .Most of the injured shoulders are the result of poorly lilting collars, and the fault usually lies in a collar being too large. It Is a good Idea to have a harness maker fit the collars to your horses lie may be able to remove padding and in other ways make the coilur over so lhat It will fit nicely. Heavy collar pads are to be avoided If possible. They :ire hot and cause the shoulders to sweat; this keeps the pad and shoulder wet, and the skin be comes soft uiid blisters eao|ig< U»ed iu the evening a* ioil as th>' collar In taken off will, in ugs or two luiuuies, remove the . dirt. This utay b-> followed by an oiled : ag, if (hi-* ia> done th» collar In the turning »hould lie suit and smooth Careless driving jerking a horse out >1 tks furrow and into It again, allow j i»,; him to work with his head around wit uue side, all '-ud to produce sore . buuitl 'i < (if rtnir •*. the Mist precaution to uk>> U Out 'O > k a I lilt iu d" a full • <*'ia ..Mil he barns ewwelhiftg ui in. )*tb and > ■»»•■* to fret tb« liuulU' r will iben giadualty uugh- '• d It b • g"wl 'dug to a) ugg. I 1 from the mother. Afterward give sweet skimmilk, to which may be added a lit tle boiled oilcake and second quality wheat flour. Peed lukewarm twice a day, about two quarts at each meal. Give the calf the two fingers of the right hand to suck up the milk at first. The calf will soon learn to drink the milk without the hand. Feed at regular hours. After the milk has been drunk put a little hay In the calf's mouth. A little bright, sweet clover hay should be tied in the pen every day. This will teach the calf to eat. Have a clean feed bucket. Disease and no end of germs lurk in the seams of a dirty bucket. A wooden bucket should not be used unless scoured out daily. The buckets should be washed, scalded and set In the sun every day. The female calves from the best cows should be raised. It is well to raise a choice male animal, to take the place of the head bull when ho becomes too old or vi cious. Dairymen having the pasture and the forage should raise their cows, Instead of buying them. Better milkers may be had and at much less cost. The labor cost of raising a calf should not be counted, as the farmer should at tend to this part of the business. He has abundant time not only to rutee the calves, but also to feed and help milk. Unless the owner gives careful attention to details he had better give up the milk business. The calf pen should be kept clean, given dry bed ding and fully exposed to the sunshine and well aired. the shoulders with cold water—Just plain cold water. Alum water has been used to good advantage; also weak so lutions of tannic acid. Alcohol tends to toughen the skin. The injuries to the top of the neck very frequently terminate in fistulas, withers, etc. A blister near the point of the shoulder Is likely to become a callous and form what is known as a "cold abscess." 111-fitting collars and poor drivers ure equally responsible for a condition known us "sweeny." TRUCK FARMING WITH DAIRY Difficult to Conceive of More Pro fituble Type of Agriculture Thun Judicious Hlvnd injr of Two. (By \V. St. KKI-LT.) Tin* t reek furm* r who is farming without manure maintains the supply of nitrogen in his soli by the use of legumes and buys a fi rtillgt-r rich Iu phosphoric ucld und potash, in this way he secures a better balanced fertilizer than the dairyman who useg manure rich in nitrogen and deficient In the mineral elements on clover sod thai is already rich In nitrogen. Now as nitrogen is the most exfien sii e element of f< rtilliy we can read* tly ». e how much more profitable It would be for the dairy farmer to lengthen his rotation one year and grow uue highly organised market crop that would sell for more thuji enough to pay for the purchased m tlit voodg required to feed the dairy cows. Iu this way he would he making better use of the surplus of nitrogen and the purchase of a small amouut of mineral fertiliser* would enable him to greatly Increase the >|eld of ' overy i rop grown In the rotation that is followed In growing food for hla cattle I believe (list we should try and In corporate sollto of the methods of soil handling practised by the truck -•rand tua/ket crop grower into the ii..Uiageni««t of uur dairy business It w. suet- ed In deriving from It ihg 'art- it and iuo»t certain profits. It is dlfteuit to conceits of g more rotttablu t>p« of farming than a |u lb lot s bu tiding of dairy farming | oel insrki t crop growing, but In order pe» Of i u uliur> we must tkuelus ,1 iud unprofitable i • (hoJ> uf «tr- right down to a 1% tit t* » [.ilu. i|' »» el soil (sitti i U*< Getting a Supply. "What did you do 'bout dat man who was standin' on de curbstone callin' you names?" asked .Vli-a. Miami Brown. "I th'owed a lump o' roal at 'lm," re plied .Mr. Erastus Pinkley. "What did he do?" "He stayed right dar, hopin' I'd make It a bucketful." TRY MURINE EYE REMEDY for Red, Weak, Weary, Watery Eyes andOranulated Eyelids. Murine Doesn't Smart —Soothes Eye Pain. Druggists Sell Murine Eye Remedy, Liquid, 25c, 60c, SI.OO. Murine Eye Salve In Aseptic Tubes, 25c, ST.OO. Eye Book! and Eye Advice Free by Mail. Marine Eye Remedy Co., Chicago. Some men marry for money and some women for alimony. DTra. Wln»losi Bay it did help ma A \ T wonderfully. Mj '' ' \ * > I • pains all left me, 1 Few stronger,and within three monthi was a perfectly well woman. "I want this letter made public to show the benefit women may derive from Lydia E. Pinkham's Vegetable Compound."—Mrs. Joeln O. Mold aw, 2115 Second St., North, Minneapolis, Minn. Thousands of unsolicited and genu, ine testimonials like the aboTe prove the efficiency of Lydia E. Pinknam'e "Vegetable Compound, which is mada exclusively from roots and herbs. Women who suffer from those dls. tressing ills peculiar to their sex should not lose sight of these facts or doubt the ability of Lydia E. Pinkham's Vegetable Compound to restore theix health. If you want special advice write to Mrs. Plnkham, at Lynn, Mass* She will treatyonrletterasstrlctly confidential. For 20 years she has been helping sick women In this way, free or charge. I>on't hesitate—write at once. Why Rent a Farm and be compelled to pay to your landlord most of your hard-earned profits? Own your own Secure a Free Homestead In anitoba, Saskatchewan or Alberta, or purchass land In of thess C b I districts and bank a I I profit of SIO.OO or R I $12.00 an acre A I • v * r y year. J Land purchased 9 ■ 4 A years ago at SIO.OO an i \|f K acre has recently » A I 'Ufl changed hands at cr °p ft * rown on *^ e,e | av 4 # warrant advance. Y* can feS Become Rich w ttV'Ww dairy! ng.mlxed farming and grain irowlnc In V* the provinces of MntilloDa, - A .SatkalihpHtin and Alberta. r ifl l>« « home %teud and pre empf lon areas, as well ss land held by railway and land com- I s ./ provide buiucf 1 '4 .1* * Adaptable soli, healthful i chinnle, splendid schools L ygT;r v 'V and churrhea.tfotid railv%aya. / in. riuturl'*»t"l'i.Vt Wi-Vt'^bow OWJf-+ , a- JL M.-ii.aim, writ, to fiup tof linn.l cT> JftfcC? jT. Csntalitui Uuisrotutiui Agunt, UVKM WIVIMMM ifcCT r/ tote. l«Wt. All -*aipr , ((?M n»kr.ri TU«,) II For Headaches Caused by sick stomach, ill rcgulated bile, sluggish bowels, nervous strain or overwork, the safest and surest remedy is BEECHAM'S PILLS Swid Evarivbsrs. In Uses 10a. a»4 tßn. A OTUU A CUWIO TiITAT CUMB AO I nlflA fmmmmmmmmmmmmmmmrnmmm «n s)>iaiH»Mt», V* 4ahi •»» (>*•! I a g FREEJESf TRaTitl)| HAMM WHetit'l.M.'ti', U..1 4, i UuilJl.,, « ki. .«* PITENT its Ut* atUse*.- t «M*U *#«* PATENTS 4JOM* M Mill' • •#« kN 11, ft It llk L* U i»|f*.isl«i I w I'Mtb. I*«* \?isa'B\ . 1 Co> - p| 112