r2srw~n iPoop NAN MIDLIFEF IGFE J JANES F there was a gold mine ' l 112.T v7 ¥?T]\ ' n Jour back yard or on I ntg [Kf your farm you'd bustle Y/wi frvX to work It, wouldn't you? tfUflF vM OU wouldn't eat, or 7rh s ' ee P> or drink until your 7 lb ir// s P ac^e b ad begun to toss tip earth. You'd work yUzfllft like ten men, and you'd . Silt'A<\' dream of the work nights. And why? lieoause you're after gold—the yellow metal. If it was in a eruder and less romantic form you wouldn't work so hard, and that is why—today—there Is a "gold mine" not so very far off ifrom every hustling, brainy, ambitious young man in tha United States." ' These were the words of John D. Rockefeller, recently spoken on the subject of "opportunities." And he finished with, "The times of our great est gold and sliver discoveries, of our Yukons and our Callforniaa. am gone, but the times of our more valuable "discoveries'—discoveries of gold in other forms —have just dawned. For tunes are easier made today than yes terday." 112 Mr. Rockefeller, who has devoted a long life to successfully grasping "golden mines of opportunity," gave no specific directions as to just where a few mines might be found, but he hit. the nail squarely on the head just the same. The modern fortune-hunt er does not carry a six-shooter at his belt and a diploma for accuracy In its use notched in the butt of it. He dis likes bloodshed, loves good dinners, goes to theatres and, as frequently as not, owns an automobile. Perhaps he strikes a "mine" in the midst of a crowded street, or he hits upon it while listening to a Sunday sermon in church. It was there, while bowed In prayer, that one of the most val uable keys to wireless telegraphy came to its inventor, i Last year the country saved about forty million doi'.ars in the utilization of what, up until a few years ago, was known as "waste," and of all the fields which Mr. Rockefeller might name there is probably none which offers greater opportunities at. the present time to men of very small as well as large capital, than this. The utilization of wastes is not an entire ly new Idea. It has attracted a great deal of attention during the past six' years, especially, and its "wonders" have been exploited many tinges— the wonders, for instance, of coal tar by products, of ink made from the rusty hoops of old barrels, of silk ties made of the limbs of trees, and of the re markable utilization of everything from hoof to tail in our slaughter houses. It has been estimated that a hundred million dollars could be saved, or made, each year by utiliza tion of wastes instead of forty million, and that such a department would ■within a few years be as valuable as the Department of Agriculture, which has worked a revolution in the farm ing methods of the nation. This de partment would be of value not only to the large manufacturers and pro ducers, who are the sole "waste prod uct" utilizers of today, but would open tnines of profit to thousands of mer chants, wholesale men, small dealers and manufacturers, and would open up, as well, new fields for eith er small or large capital. It would show wholesale dealers how the thou sands of bushels of fruit which spoil on their hands each season could bo made to pay the wages of their work ing forces; how the great dry goods merchant co\ild add a good percentage to his profits by "utilizing" in various ■ways, and it would show where new by-product business could be started and carried on at a profit in every city. It is pointed out that practically the only "utilization of waste" busi ness with which the mass of people are acquainted, and in which they take part, is that of old paper and old rags! in the employ of the Canadian gov ernment, the writer spent a part of last year in a study of the situation between the north shore of Lake Su perior and the Pacific coast. The his tory of the States has taught Canada that the conservation of the "surface ■wealth" of a country is a tremendous ly important matter, and the govern ment is making great efforts to profit by our mistakes. In spite of these ef forts, millions of dollars are being thrown away each year in western Canada —millions of dollars which .American capital and 'American brains could save. It may seem a little exaggerated •when I say that a hundred fortunes could be made today in Canadian saw dust What Michigan, Wisconsin and Minnesota were in the lumbering world three or four decades ago. Im mense areas of Canada are today. For hundreds of miles east and west of the Superior shore the sawmill Is the life of almost every town settle ment. Mountains of sawdust lay everywhere. Sawdust is a nuisance, is carted away at large expense, is a white elephant on the lumbermak ers' hands. If a man should appear to any one of the lumber manufacturers tomorrow and say, "I will contract to take all of your sawdust for ten years," the owner would be delighted to give it to him for hauling it away. There are not only thousands, but millions of tons of It. The mills do not burn it In their furnaces, as many American manufacturers are now do ing, because they have more wood trimmings than they can use. How can this sawdust be used? Eas ily enough, and profitably enough, too. A method has now been found where by sawdust is easily and cheaply moulded into briquettes as hard as wood itself, and capable of producing a heat as powerful as that of coal. By mixing sawdust with glue-water and soluble glass, and hydraullcally pressing it, a beautiful artificial wood is made, which in France is called bois durci, and which possesses a beauty of appearance found only in ebony, rosewood and mahogany. Today the "paper question" is one of national importance. It has been pointed out a hundred times that the newspaper, magazine and popular novel reader Is responsible for the go ing of our forests at a rate which will leave us pretty nearly treeless a few years from now. And meanwhile, because of what we can class as noth ing less than ignorance, the people of this country and Canada are coolly destroying an enormous paper supply each year. For straw, after a brief proc ess, is paper. Last year I personally saw thousands of tons of straw burn ed by farmers on the Canadian prair ies. Twenty million tons were burned between Winnipeg and the coast! The value of those stacks, In paper, would be tremendous, and the figure would be doubled by those which are burned in our own western states. Scattered evenly over the grain fields the burned straw would not be a total loss, as it would be of some assist ance to the soil; but burned as it is, in huge stacks, or "winrows," it does more injury than good to the soil. In the United States there are hun dreds of ways in which money is made in the utilization of wastes— most of them thus far being in the hands of moneyed men, like million aire manufacturers, packers, eteel pro ducers, and so on. The "poor man's opportunities" have not yet been tak en advantage of. Today, for instance, there is scarcely a city of any size in the United States where a man with from two to five thousand dollars at his command could not set up a by product factory in waste fruit that would pay him large dividends on hi«s money. What a large wholesale fruit merchant has carted away from his back door as "waste" would pay the salaries of his employees if turned into vinegar, flavors and "oils," and each of these by-products would be up to the highest standard of the pure food regulations, for decay in fruit is a chemically harmless change. In another way there are opportu nities for small capital in the sheep raising districts of the United States and Canada. Not many years ago gold "wash" was a waste; today it yields a treasure. It has been found now that when a sheep is washed the dirty water which has cleansed the wool Is of considerable value, and that it will yield a "wool fat" fifteen per cent as great as the wool on the sheep. From this fat five valuable products are secured, used as the CAMERON COUNTY PRESS, THURSDAY. MARCH 23, 1911. bases for ointments, cosmetics and fibre lubricants. In only a very few cities of th» world is garbage made of value today. What the "wastes" of the American housewife may be made to yield in cash has recently been demonstrated by Paul Bruet, a German, In London. Bi*uet says that he started on $1,200. Ho began burning garbago in large vertical cylinders, surrounded by steam Jackets, and evaporated the seventy-five per cent of water in the garbage. The fatty substances were dissolved, and as a result of the proc ess he produced & fertilizer which Is worth fifteen dollars a ton. So suc cessful were his first operations that ho started a small company on a cap ital of SIO,OOO, and last year this $lO,- 000 investment made a profit of $16,000! In many places throughout the Tlnited States, and especially In the Canadian northwest, there are splen did opportunities for the wide-awake American to make money In the es tablishment of a new kind of twine making factories. Farmers are now using a hemp or Jute twine for bind ing their grain, at the enormous cost of from $l2O to SIBO per ton. It la now found that an excellent twine can be made from ordinary marsh grass and from the common "wire grass" which grows abundantly over millions of acres of western country. Along the Atlantic, the Pacific and the Gulf of Mexico millions of tons of seaweed are cast up by the waves. It is often four and five feet in depth, and In France, where some of it is now being used, it Is found that it will gather best where large stones are placed within tide-mark on sandy shores. In this country there is as yet little thought of putting seaweed to use, and yet it is one of the richest and most productive of all "wastes." One ton will produce eight pounds of iodine, large quantities of chloride of potassium, four to ten gallons of vola tile oil, three or four gallons of nap tha, and 250 to 400 pounds of sulphate of ammonia. Only about 70 per cent of the total mass is actual waste, and the remaining 30 per cent in each ton is worth between $25 and S4O. The highest value is reached when it is turned in gelose, or vegetable isin glass. Science, the wizard of the century, touches with his fairy wand the black, viscid coal-tar from the gas retorts, and from the 140 pounds of gas-tar in a ton of coal science today makes aniline dyes numbering over 2,000 dis tinct' shades. Of medicines, antisep tics, hypnotics and fever-allaying prep arations it furnishes quinine, antipy rlne, atropine, morphine, exalglne, sornnal, salol, chloralamlde, hypnol, and a host of others. It furnishes perfumes—heliotroplne, clove, queen of the meadows, cinnamon, bitter al monds, vanillin, camphor, wintergreen and thymol. It has given to the world belllte and picrite, two powerful explosives. It supplies more than 20 flavoring extracts; Is the housekeep ers' ally, with benzine and naptha, the insecticides; supplies the fanner with ammonial fertilizers, and has given to the photographer his -two developers, hydroquinone and likonogen. It yields paraffin, creosote and pitch; material for artificial paving; saccharin, a sub stance 300 times sweeter than sugar. It gives us lampblack, material for rod inks, lubricating oils, varnish, rosin, almost our entire supply of ammonia, and other things whose names would fill a page. Not many years ago, when a "beef" was killed 40 per cent of the animal was »*aste. Today nothing Is lost "but its dying breath." It is true, as Mr. Rockefeller says, that today "there Is a 'gold mine' nst so very far from every hustling, brainy, ambitious young man In the United States" —and many of these "mines" may be found In the utilizing of "wastes." The Essential Scrap, .Tudgo—Can't you and your husband live happily without fighting? Mrs. Casey—No, yer anner; not hop pily. | IMPRISONED FOR SMUGGLING r~~— ——————i To defraud the government of the 7"iT United States of Its customs coming here from the °' d world has been the . darling wish of many women ever IW/WQiL since Americans have been able to ln dulge In the luxury of an ocean voy " age. Miss Multimillionaire, secure In I |i her social position, did not like to be I Jj held U P on the dock an d made to pay Si large sums for being caught trying to I swindle the government. But -when I"" ,| ' l) *b® Is caught finally she chafes under Yhrf/Wnt ber treatment, but society stands by Vh' J ! liei " aiK ' that encourages others to foi- ! 'A'' To remove this P r °P from the fash '''<' ionable woman the authorities have decided to jail those caught In de 'Ki ' fraudlng Uncle Sam of his dues. This penalty, it Is thought, will prevent rep- Hi uta ble women from engaging In th® \ '$T P / 7116 flrst to suffer the lmpiisonmentj 7 •'"•• ''" / -■ 1 and thf» odium which attaches to It 1b: Mrs. Roberta Q. Hill, divorced wife of : Major Hill of the English army. She pleaded guilty to smuggling in a sable ooat and jewelry valued at SB,OOO, pleading in extenuation that she was igno rant of the law. Judge Martin in New York fined her $2,000 and sentenced her to serve three days in a cell in the Tombs. Mrs. Hill became hysterical when imprisonment was added to fine. She is a daughter of Morris Menges, a horseman of Brooklyn. Mrs. Hill is given to the romantic. At sixteen she man-led Halsey Corwin of Brooklyn, but she soon after divorced him. Discovery after discovery of those attempting to smuggle valuables into the ports of our'country, chiefly at New York, have resulted only In flues, and this has failed to stop tho practice. Exposure and consequent disgrace proving ineffectual, the courts finally determined on imprisonment. This seemed the only way to make the rich and influential and society belles come to a realization of this kind of offending—that It was a real crime. HUNGARIAN"STATESMAN HERE 1 One of the most eminent of Euro pean statesmen. Count Albert Appon yl, member of the Hungarian parlia ==SEN\ ment and ex-minister of public wor- ship and education of Austria-Hungary, mu A \ is now on a vißlt to this country in vv -v|s the interest of international peace. He - \yik v has come to deliver a series of lee £r#\ >\Ka problem in Europe and to urge this if'ifrO) country to become the world's leader vVJ 3ji / In the efforts to abolish war. This is not bis flrßt visit t0 the Unlted States. He came here in 1904 to attend the 'A peace conference held at St. Louis. He iV\vraSt- - i if///////, has been active in the cause of the I W ' ''ti world 8 P eace for many years and has ') jZslh! attended interparliamentary confer- V if??/ i ences on the subject at Brussels, , 1// Christiania, Paris nnd London. [' M i,'V :. t Count Apponyl is a member of a l'yMHungarian aristocracy which trace® '///// 118 descent in an unbroken line back MPQr to 1235. Ho was born In 1846, was ed ucated in schools conducted by the Jesuits and has been in public life since 1872. He was a conservative when he first entered politics, but is now the leader of the nationalists, or the Kos suth party, in Hungary. Although an aristocrat by birth and heredity, he Is noted for his democracy and years ago relinquished the seat which was his by right in the Hungarian house of peers in order to sit in the lower house. The count is the owner of magnificent estates in Hungary and is wealthy. His wife is related to the royal family of England, her grandmother having been a sister of Queen Victoria's husband, the prince consort. IMPORTANT COMMITTEE HEAD ————————————, one of the figures of the Sixty-sec ond congress will be Representative Oscar W. Underwood of Alabama, se lected by the Democratic caucus to head the all-important ways and means 1 committee. Mr. Underwood will be \ the Democratic floor leader, succeed lng ln that P° sltlon Representative Se wsb) reno E- Payne of New York, and will \ giVe h ' S Ilame t0 016 new tariff bill j \ which the Democrats propose to put Mr ' Underwood never held an office " ' or was a candl date for 6uch a position ' until 1894. Then he ran for congress, J the entire issue being the tariff, and i/s,/ he had a bitter light. Speaker Crisp M / i }V\. came into the district to help him and w ben the votes were counted he had jar won by 1,000. Since that time he has ' never had an -opponent for the nomi ■ nation. He has been elected to con gress eight times, three times without a Republican opponent. He has always been a close friend and confidential adviser of Champ Clark and la only forty-eight years old. He was born ln Louisville, ICy. His grandfather was a colleague of Henry Clay ln tfie senate. Young Underwood attended the University of Virginia, graduating ln law In 1884. It was there that he began to get his Democratic ideas. He has been married twice, his first wife dying ln 1900. In 1904 he remarried. Mr. Underwood is a prominent member of tho Birmingham Country club and spends all of his spare time ln the summer playing golf on the slopes of Red mountain. MOUNTS HIGH IN THE ARMY I * Another step in his steadily upward career has been taken by Col. Enoch Crowder, whose enviable army rec- IW- \ ord is one to stimulate emulation. Oen. George W. Davis, Judge advocate ffiw'ii general of the army, was retired on . . ] account of having reached the age limlt * and to the vacanc y thus created WmeSZsM' yMt Colonel Crowder has succeeded in th® Ordinary courso of promotion, as ho was tho Be nior colonel ln the judge vM-lm/?' MM \b ' lw / advocate division, lap Mmwl <*ffl Colonel Crowder is a native of Mis- W X \lv kZ// sourl, where he was born April 11, n m It 1859, the Eon of John Herbert and // I' l l I Mary ( Welle r) Crowder. He graduat // /xlliLl// ed from the Mllltai '>' a cademy in 1881, ',/// , Jtgaj, and he received the degree of LL * B * ' rom th® University of Mis r / sourl. Colonel Crowder served In the AfflJ f Philippine islands in 1898-1901. Dur- ' nß War etween Japan and Russia 1 7» ho became conspicuous as an observer '' !'r/' ■ /!/! //( of the field maneuvers, being with the Japanese army from April, 1904, until April, 1905. In Cuba, 1906-'O7, he acted as financial advisor of the Cuban government, his services being greatly valued. Warrior that ho Is, however, there Is one conquest which the colon«( ha.B never made. No womanly heart hr.s yet capitulated to his superior Ud tics, a willies priaoueri least ha is not married. A MINISTER BPKAKB. His Statement Should Convince the Moat Skeptical. Kidney sufferers should take fresh courage In reading the statement of Rev. Marlon 8. Foreman of Green t field, Ind., given below. He Bpeaks for the ben efit of suffering hu manity. Says he:"I had kidney trouble In a bad form and was usable to get relief until I began the use Doan's Kidney Pills. They did such good work that I strongly recommend them. I hope my testimonial will prove of benefit to other kidney sufferers." Remember the name—Doan'a. For sale by all dealers, 50 cents • box. Foster-Mllburn Co., Buffalo, N. Y. A Terrible End. "He met with a hard death." "How was that?" "Suffocated by his own hot air In • telephone booth." For constipation, biliousness, liver dl» turbances and diseases resulting from ink pure blood, take Garfield Tea. Many a man who swears at a big monopoly is nourishing a little one. Big Assets Four hundred thousand people take a CASCARET every night —and rise up in the morning and call them blessed. If you don't belong to this great crowd of CASCARET takers you are missing the greatest asset of your life. 810 CASCARETS IOC a box for a week's treatment, all druggists. Ijiggest seller in the~world. Million boxes a month. horse I've cured. Have recommended it to my neigh bors for thrush and they say it is fine. I find it the best Liniment I ever used. I keep on hand your Sure Colic Cure for myself and neigh bors, and I can certainly recom mend it for Colic."— S. E. SMITH, McDonough, Ga. Cured Thrush. MR. R. W. PARISH, of Bristol, Ind.,R No. 2, writes:—"l have used lots of your Liniment for horses and myself. It is the best Liniment in the world. I cured one of my horses of thrush. Her feet were rotten; the frogs came out j she laid down most of the time. I thought she would die, but I used the Liniment as directed and Bhe never lies down in the daytime now." SLOANS LINIMENT should be in every stable and ap plied at the first sign of lameness. You don't need to rub, it penetrates. Will kill a spavin, curb or splint, re duce wind puffs and swollen joints, and is a sure and speedy remedy for HfSKSIW fistula, sweeney, I founder and thrush. fj I Price, 800.and SI.OO Sloan's book on ■ fTnttWl I horses, eattle, slieep B Ci'ly;nJ B and poultry sent M free. Address B Dr. Earl S. Sloan, OBBSfiHI Boston, Mass., IT. 8. A. Quick Relief for an upset stomach, hi<> ' coughs, a sick headache, con stipated bowels, or a bilious attack is secured by using BEECHAMS PILLS Sold Everywhere. In boxes 10c. and 25c. B2"Io IN 6 MONTHS Our clients who acted on our advice in the purchase of only three estab lished dividend - paying stocks made 92.1% on their investment between August 3, igio and February 14, 1911, or a* the rate of 184.2% annually. We have prepared a handsome booklet telling: how this was done, explaining the operation of trading in the stock market, and showing how enormous profits can be made with a minimum of risk. THIS BOOKLET IS FREE FOR THE ASKING-. WRITE rOR IT TODAY CHARLES A. STONEHAM & CO. COMMISSION BROKERS 86 Broad Btre«t New York Clt, J HE BEST MEDICINE l'!or 1 S l oucHsTco!!!!o3(j 3