The Centre reporter. (Centre Hall, Pa.) 1871-1940, August 17, 1893, Image 7

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    mo a, A A UF SAO
THE WHEAT AND THE CHAFF.
There is an old talo of tke go'den age days,
Whon the gods with men parleyed and
moved,
That a critic who doalt all blame and no
praiso
Was once by Apollo reproved.
dhe god handed back to the critical fool
A handful of nnwinnowed grains.
Said he: “Loewe the wheat, as seems ever
your rule;
Youn may have all the chaff for your pains.”
Now, this guida to our choice is suggestive
to-day,
Though told of a fabulous time,
To ans and all who its teachings obey
In every country or clime,
For the wheat and tha chaff are mixed for us
still,
As they were in those mythical grains ;
And if we choose now to see ouly the iV,
We shall have only that for our puics!
All pathways are checkered, Gray shadows
and night
Alternate with the san's cheering rays.
Our eyes grow accustomed to darkness or
light
As we fix upon either oar gaze.
And we can be cear-eyed, or we can be
blind,
As each one his vision so trains ;
If he chooses the he wonder to
find
He can seo nothing bright for his pains?
dark, need
From the marsh Lily
Lift
Its delicate, queeniy
NOOME SWaInp ses the
3
o
ue head;
From water and :lime and dan
k earth i
aify
The nutriment bast for its nad.
it conld draw
Poisons lurk in these ihiogs.
evil thence
As well as the good that it geins,
Shall it choose, then, those noxious el-monts
wheace
Hurt and death will proceed for its pans
in our fellow men are the elements mixed;
Forever good mingles with sin,
On their errors, their faults, shall we
our gaze fixed,
O'erlooking divine sparks within?
—— 4
Ah! a lesson
then,
Wa may |
in judging our frail broth ra,
earn from these fabulous grains,
when
We receive only chaff for our pains?
—{ Emily £. Adams, io New York San.
{Emily C. Adams, in New York Sar
POOR JOBINARD.
It's 20 years since that time.
light-hearted boy then—a boy of 20. |
lived in Paris, and [ studied Art. Being
an artist, 1 always spelled Art with a
capital A. 11
of besides Art now,
inting what the public will
peta to make it pay—l have
pay.
But it is not about myself I want to
talk; it is of Orson—of Orson
sute, Orson the Unrelenting, Orson the
Hater of Art. Of course his name wasn't
Orson. His real name was Jobinard,
and he lived at the corner of the Rue de
'Ancienne Comedie, did this uncompro
mising grocer, this weil-to-do Esau of
the Quartier Latin, this man who hated
Art, artists, and, aboveall, Art students
with a peculiar ferocity.
Alcibiade Jobinard had reason to dis
like Art students. They had a nasty
way of getting ioto his debt, but Jobi.
anard took the i by the horos-—he
gave no more credit,
“Ma foi!” he would say, with a super.
cilious sneer, “Credit is dead, my goo
young sir. He docan’t live Any |
longer. He is dead and buried.”
And then one had to go empty
JH
I was a
I have to think
buy. 1
I ade it
the
feel
(13141
ficre
away.
old
for |
pile |
SLICK |
It had been so handy in the goo
days just to run into Jobinard
whatever one wanted, and-—-well,
it up.” You see could get an entire
meal at Jobinard's, one of those little
sham beneless hams; they've qui
enough on them for four. Tinned pro-
visicns in imexhaustible variety, wines
from 75 centimes upward, liqueurs, des-
sert, even in the shape of cheeses of all |
sorts, almonds and raisins, grapes and |
Quaches. It was excessively convenient. |
hen one was hard up, one dealt with |
Jobinard, and it was put down to the
account, When one was in funda one!
dined and breakfasted at a restaurant
and left Jobinard’s severely alone.
But now all was changed. Mile. Am- |
epaide was an uncommonly pretty girl,
and we were all desperately head over
heels in love with her. By “we” I mean
the Art students, but of all the Art stu-
dents that were desperately in love with
Mile. Amenaide, Daburon, the sculptor,
was the most demonstrative. Jobinard
hated Daburon with a deadly hatred be.
cause Daburon never expended more than
ten centimes at a time. It was the so-
ciety of Mlle. Amenaide that Daburon
hungered for, and he got it because he
was entitled to it, being a purchaser.
Mlle. Amenaide was Jobinard's cashier,
It was a large shop,and there were several
assistants, but all moneys were paid to
Mile. Amenaide, the cashier, who sat in
a glass box underneath the great chiming
clock. :
Daburon, the sculptor, would enter
the shop, nod in a cavalier manner to
Jobinard, as though he were the very
dust beneath his fect; then he would
look at Mlle. Amenaide, raise his hat
with his right hand, place his left upon
his heart and make her a low bow: then
he would pretend to blow her a kiss
from the tips of his fingers, as though he
were a circus rider; then he would take
up a box of matches or some other pe.
culiarly inexpensive article,
“Have the kindness to wrap that up
carefully for me in paper,” he would re.
mark in a patronizing manner, Then he
would march up to Mile. Amenaide with
the air of an Alexander—you could al.
most hear the tune of ‘See the Conquer.
ing Hero Comes” playing as you saw
him do it. He would pay his 10 cen-
times and whisper some compliment into
the ear of Mlle. Amenaide. Then he
would receive his purchase from the
hand of M. Jobioard in a nificent
and condescending manner. Then he
would strike a ridiculous attitude of ex-
: rated admiration and stare at the
unhappy grocer as though he were one
of the seven wonders of the world,
i
Ss
yurih
te |
“What a bust!” or “What arms!" or
i f
“What muscularity I” he would say, and |
then he would heave a sigh and swagger
out of the shop.
Jobinard, oho was a particularly ugly,
thickset, hairy little man, used at first
rather to resent these roferences to his
personal advantages. His four assist.
ants and his cashier would titter, and
Jobinard used to blush, but at length
the poor fellow fell into the snare laid
for him by the villuin Daburon,
He got to believe himself the perfect
type of manly beauty. When a French-
man has once come to this conclusion, |
there is no folly of which he is not ready |
to be guilty. |
The fact is, Daburon had passed the |
word round. The Art students, male |
and female, invariably stared apprecia
tively at the little, hairy, thickset Jobin-
ard as though he were the glass of fash- |
jon and the mold of form. Jobinard |
now began to give himself airs. He
swaggered about the shop, he exhibited |
himself in the doorway, he posed and &t- |
titudinized all day long, and then we be-
gan to make it rather warm for Jobin
ard.
“Ah, M. Jobinard, if you were only a
poor man, what a thing it would be for |
Art! Ah, if we only had vou to sit to
us in the nude. We are going to do |
Ajax defying the lightning next week,
What an Ajax you would make, Jo-
binary!"
“You really ought to sacrifice yourself
in the interests of Art,” another would
remark. ‘You'd ruin the professional
model. You would indeed.”
“Gentlemen, gentlemen,” Jobinard
would reply, his hairy, baboonlike face
grinning with delight, “‘a too benevolent
ie me the man | am,” and
hen he struck an attitude,
“What legs!” we all cried in a sort of
chorus.
“Ah, M. Jobinard,” I said pleadingly,
“if you would only permit us to photo
graph your lower extremities,”
“Never, ¢
y
¥
entie replied
Jobinsa x **] care noth-
Besides, would be al-
I could look into
to face
fatal
never!”
ing for A
most indecent ;
the evidences of my 100
that
From day Jobinard ceased to
essional apron.
a after
It was about week this that
establishment.
fs
i
9
t Jobinard's
to Jobinard
man, we smiled, and then we bowe
The hairy little grocer seemed consid
erably astonished atour performance
“MM. Jobipnard.” said Daburon,
was our spokesman, *‘you see before yi
hree, representing the
i of aris, some S00 in num
We
be
a
one
w ho
yi
ber » hs to bee a favor
that it would
absolutely impossible to induce a man of
your position in society to sit to us: |
M. Jobinar i, & MAN possessing the lower
of a Hercul Farnese
Hereu'es, M. Jobinard—and I need hard
Ir remind vou that Hercules was a demi-
roid —has his duties as well as his priv-
Those magnificent lower extrem
they belong
of
MiSs,
extremities es, 4
god
ilages
“Su lower extremitics as
are not for an age, but {
Such YOurs,
monsieur, or all
time, They must be handed down in
marble to posterity, The legs of
nard must become a household word
Art To mr
would be a crime,
the coy cht of ye
They would mul
paris and become a
ity over the whole «
Johi-
in
fuse our request, monsieur,
You would retain
ur own legs of course
in plaster of
marketable commod-
ivilized world, Such
said Daburon, respect
{fully prodding sad patting the unfor
tunate Jobinard, ist not be to
the artist What a biceps, what
i id, my friends!” continued,
a mazaificent development of the
sternoclidomastoideus !”
IVT
3 tied
bre Lipiied
¥
baz aa Suman
Mmuscies as ThHicee,
In post
IC WOT
i
fr he
i
I" we cried in
“You will not refuse us
“You wiil
Daburon.
srentiemen, I yield! I see that Art
cannot get on without me. When would
you like to begin?” said poor Jobinard
“To-morrow at noon." answered Dabu-
he shook hands with the little
not dare torefuse us,” added
Next day a long procession filed into
the shop
“This way, gentlemen, this way, if
you please,” said M. Jobioard, as he ia-
We must have been at least thirty.
something; there |
were four sacks of plaster, some paving
stones, bits of broken iron, bricks, and |
nard alive,
A great mass of moist plas-
3
become necessary to the world of Art
were denuded of their covering sad |
placed in the moist mass, then large
quantities of the liquid plaster was poured |
on them, then the scraps of old iron, the
bars, the paving stones and the bricks
were carefully inserted and built up into |
the still soft mass which was at least a
yard high and a yard thick.
“Don't move, dear M. Jobinard™
cried Daburon, ** the plaster is about to
set. We shall return in half an hour,
by which time the molds will be com-
ete,”
M. Jobinard, seated in the center of his
back yard, bolt upright, bowed to each
of us ns we passed out,
In about a quarter of an hour Jobi-
nard began to feel distinctly uncom.
fortable, *“T'he molds seem getting
terribly heavy,” he said to one of
his assistants who kept him com.
pany. “‘They seem on fire, and I can’t
move."
At that moment the procession, headed
by Daburon, filed once more into the
courtyard,
“It's getting painful, gentlemen,” said
Jobinard., +1 feel na though I were be-
ing turned to stone.”
“Try and bear it bravely, Nothing is
attained in this world, dear monsieur,
without a certain amount of physical
suffering. It will be set as hard as marble
ins few minutes. We will obtain the
necessary appliances for your release at
once, Jobinard, Remain perfectly quiet
till our return,” said Daburom, rather
suavely.
As Shen we Sach of us Kisied Loge An
tips solemnly to poor Jobin
We filed out once more. It was the last
day of the term at the Art school, and we
were all off for our | Hidaye.
For two hours Jobi waited for us
in an agony of fear; then he sont for a
stonemason,
to get the plaster off with a hammer,
We had, by the direction of the Demon
Daburon, omitted to oil the shapely limbs
of our vietim,
Poor Jobinard,—[Tit-Bits,
A Sanall’s Formidable Moutn,
“1t is a fortunate thing for man and
the rest of the animal kingdom,” said the
naturalist, ‘that no large wild animal
has a month constructed with the de-
vouring apparatus built on the plan of
MAKING,
BY CYRUS EDSON, M. D.,
Health Commissioner, New York City.
It is necessary, if one would under-
stand the sanitary aspects of bread
making, to fully comprehend the pres-
that lives. The snail itself is such an un-
amateur
the snail they miss studying one of the
their observation,
“Anyone who has noticed a snail feed.
ing on a leaf must have wondered how
such a soft, flabby, slimy animal can
knowledge had
of those germs by medical men, a knowl-
edge which is the result of innumera-
ble experiments, Being this, the old
term of a “theory” has become a mis-
nomer, A germ of a disease is a plant,
so small that I do not know how to ex-
its lack of size. When this germ is in-
troduced into the blood or tissues of
appears to be an-
in the leaf, leaving an edge as smooth and
straight as if it bad been cut with a
knife. That is due to the peculiar and
formidable mouth he has. The snail
It
the
snmne
The tongue is a ribbon which
This topgue Is in reality a hand-saw,
with the teeth on the surface instead of
on the edge. The teeth are small
that as many as 30,000 of them have been
1 tongue. They are
exceedingly sharp and only a few of
them are used a time. Not exactly
only u few of them, but a few of them
comparatively, for the snail will proba
4.000 or 5,000 of them in
He does this by means of
mi
HNeoiied
The rool
as a bone i
his tongue
and, rmspog
SAWS through
always le
80
at
Iv have Hse
at once,
coiled tongue.
of t he chooses
part be brings into service
mouth is hard
grasps the leaf betwe
that hard
his
toughest
the
He can uncaoil as
hie and the
ius
iis ns
stibstance
tongue,
feal with eo
smooth ao
with
is
d
straight.”
wip
0
change,
Just What a Norther Is,
: how
norther? Lhe
Texas
by
“What is a
question was pul 1
man to Major B. M. Vanderhurst, of
: who was airing his Apollo Belvi
i ia th
crept under the awnin
“A Texas norther, my
is an extremely d unp and disagreeable
wetness that crawls up out of the he
the nortd pole
swoops down upon the
southland at 8 Nancy Hanks gait, eatch
ing you with vour
a Globe Democrat
ad sunshine that
g of the Lindell
inquiring friend,
¥
He
where used to be and
sometimes sunny
mosquito-bar under
clothes on and your overcoat in soak
It is mote penetratiog
and requires but
Wavy ts
of a fat man's
to regard the he!l of
the thing all the
3
be desired
Anmonia,
to work
TECOREeR
than
secret
snd cause
m
t
i
its
io
him
fire as
one world
to
norther has the victim in it
that he has a combination of
It
a fires
nost
and congestive « hills
in Texas not
body freezes to
IR
tO make
death
slam on ‘the most
earth.” Few h
had any
custom was rither ann
itself to keep piling on coats until §
and the «
SIS
provisions
when a no
Giscouragea
That custom
Northern
of
gust
1
SAVE up Oi
is still generally followed.
people regard t
Texas climate with «
They go down there
ed months of and
months fall weather: to revel in
the glad sunshine and to inhale the um
tuons perfume of iia buds
year. They get into their 0
and send their heavy weights to {riends
the Of
Just about
his eccentricity
dis
ex pret ting to
thie xtreme
at
ten sunmer two
f early
magn
back home to be given to
packed away in camphor
that time a norther arrives and, for three
days, they long to go to Manitoba to get
warm.’
poor
Some Seeming Discrepancies,
What is the precise color expressive
of anger or rage? Novelists seem hardly
to have settled the point yet, if we may
judge from the four passages below,
1. Page 9. ‘*Adricone suddenly ap-
2. Page 20. ‘“The littie fellow was
trembling with a blue rage.”
3. Page 57. “Albert was choking
He turned green in the
face.”
4. Page 178. ‘‘Rodoiphe, who was of
a very oholeric temperament, passed in-
the rainbow.”
A regular exhibition of fireworks, an
artist's palette for variety, don’t you
think? | Chicago Times.
OLLA PODRIDA,
The czar’s throne is said to be worth
four times as much as Queen Victoria's,
The Mississippi deposits in the sea in
A year solid matter weighing 812,500,-
000,000 pounds.
Sixty petacin now occupy Robinson
Crusoe’s island Juan Fernandez. They
are cattle herders,
The Corean does not have the trouble
of carrying his umbrella in his hand.
It is like an ordinary umbrella in shape,
only it is smaller and has no handle, It
is made of oil paper and is worn on the
head over the hat.
In the Vatican at Rome there is a
marble statue with natural eyelashes, the
only one with this peculiarity in the
world, It represents Ariadne sleeping
on the island of Naxos at the moment
when she was deserted by Theseus,
A monstrosity is carefully guarded on
the farm of W, H. Reynolds, at Gaonon,
Tex. It isa pig with head and ears like
those of an elephant, a nose like the
trunk of the beast just named, and a sin-
gle eye where the mouth ought to be.
The famous Tyrian dye was discovered
in this way: A man and his dog were one
day walking on the seashore, when the
dog ato a murex, a species of small
shellfish, and his master noticed that his
lips were at once tinged with the royal
og obtain, " -
"DISEASE GERMS
FOUND
Jut the germs of the greater part of
the germ diseases, that is, of the infec
tious and contagions diseases, will de
in without
being in the body of a human being,
provided al them the
proper conditions, conditions
‘ i x
are to be fou: ina
velop Or Increass unmber
IWRYE Yon give
hese
which is be
They
the or
sigh
rained
10 veast Aare
warmth,
matter
after certain
Hoist re
flon
shanges, feed
to
that yeast 1s
Bit
ganic
f+} rs
of the germs,
ir on which the
It is necessary mber at this
point germ growth, and
when introdneed into a mixtnre of gin
Or
warmth
rem
Prose ne of
fer
COR starch, in the
and moisture sets up a
wee mixture be a starchy
3 chenges a portion
EL ad then de
COM POSES t he gine ose | 5
changing it
into two new substances, viz... carbo:
acid gas and aleohol
Now the glutten, which salso ao
stituent of dongh and moist starch,
affords, with the lstter, an i
nidas for the deve lope nt of
excellent
ores ¢
germs of
disease as well as for the veast germs
The germs of cholera, as of typhoid
fever, would, if introduced into dough,
find very favorsi le conditions for ther
growth
i Bis alarm
ot wish fo Pros Ba
Ri i
3 hint ft t}
chi chance of the
s and of cholera r
i
willing to say ther
germs of
the
bread
caching
omachs of & 1 spie who eat
stance to be eaten is exposed to the air,
the greater the chance thai germs will
be deposited on it. Bread raised with
yeast is worked down or kneaded twice
before being baked and this process
may take anywhere from four hours to
ten. It has, then, the chance of col-
leeting disease germs during this pro-
cess of raising and it has two periods
of working down or kneading during
each of which it may gather the dirt
containing the germs from the baker's
hands. As no bread save that raised
with yeast, goes through this long
process of raising and kneading so no
bread save that raised with yeast has
so good n chance of gathering germs.
What is meant by “‘raising”’ bread
is worth a few words, The
enormons growth of the yeast fungi
the yeast ‘‘germ,” in other words,
These fungi effect a destroetive fer-
mentation of a portion of the starchy
matter of the flour—one of the most
J valuable nutrient elements in the flour,
TEAST BREAD.”
fermentation proauces
! The carbonic
acid gas, and this, having its origin in
little particle of the
which is itself everywhere in the
every starch
a
flour,
he particles of the dough
r This 18 what
ne the bread
2 to see that it
on the dough, purely
mechanical. The dough, which
before close-grained mass, now
of little holes, and when eocoked
in this condition is what we ovdinariiy
Thi porous quality of
bread enables the stomach to rapidly
digest it, for the
ly soak into and
The fermentation of
the dough, however, uses up a portion
of the elements of the loaf
{ it be possible, therefore, to produce
without this de-
pushe % aside 1
to give itself
ealle d “‘rais
It
is, ' is
OTH is
is but a glances
x ¢¥octs
ne
Was
1%
fall
ini
ight
11
Cail
and easily gastric
Hices quick attack it
‘ 1
from all sides
nutrient
a light porous loaf
struction and without the “kneading
fills dough with
. and without the long
#
Sz. 4 .
process, which the
ith
germs and 8
have not the slightest cause to
hat other disesse
be carried about
I have
fering from cutar
ing the dongh in
with naked hands Arms 1
no resson to suppose bakers are
liable to cotaneonus diseases than 3
other men, and I know, as every honse-
wife knows, yeast raised bread must be
worked a long time This is an ex-
ceedingly objectionable thing from the
standpoint of a physician for the
reason that the germs of disease which
are in the air and dost and on stair.
in street oars, are
collected on the hands,
who has ever kneaded
hay © Iw an
i the |
road
met jonrnevmen bakers, suf
y
diseases
bread
YOO
the
anda
. work
frongh
often
person
the dough cleans the hands. This
he makes up his
bateh of bread are sure to find their
find all the conditions necessary for
and growth. This is
on heat to kill these germs, because it
is almost certain that they will be
there. Now, underdone or doughy
bread is a form which every man and
woman has seen.
underdone bread is unhealthful. This
reputation has been earned for it by
the experience of countless genera
tions, and no careful mother will wish
her children to eat bread that has not
been thoroughly cooked. The reason
given for this recognized unhealthful-
ness has been that the uncooked yenst
dough is very difienlt to digest. No
one but a physician would be apt to
think of disease germs which have not
been killed during the process of bak-
ing ns a eanse of the sickness following
the use of nneooked yeast broad, Yet
this result from this eaase is more than
probable. 1 have not the slightest
donbt that could we trace back some
of the onses of illness which, we meet
in our practice we would find that
germs collected by the baker have
fonnd their way into the yeast bread,
that the heat has not been sufficient to
destroy them, that the uncooked yeast
nny fw been eaten and with it the
colonies of germs, that they have
found their way into the blood and
that the eall for our services which
followed, has rounded off this sequence
of events,
1 have already pointed out that the
germs of disease are to be found in the
BRERAD WITHOUT YEAST
ING
period during which the raising pro-
cess goes on, the gain in food and the
gain in the avoidance of the germs is
exceedingly plain
But while we can easily see the
dangers which attend the use of yeast
it is certain that the vesicnlating effect
prodaeed by it on the dough is to the
inst degree perfect. It is apparent
that if we are to substitute any other
system of bread making we must have
one which will give us, first, mechanical
resulta equally as good, that ix, that
will produce minnte bubbles of
carbonic acid gas throughout the mass
(of dough. Now it is in no way diffi-
{enlt to produce carbonic acid gas
chemioally, but when we are working
at bread we must use such chemicals
as ave perfectly healthful. Fortunately
these are not hard to find.
The evils wheh aitend the yenst-
made bread are obviated by the use of
| a properly made, pure and wholesome
| baking powder in lien of yeast. Bak-
| ing powders are composed of an acid
‘and an alkali which, if properly com-
| bined, should when they unite at once
| destroy themselves and produce ocar-
| bonie acid gas. A good baking pow-
| der does its work while the loaf is in
| the oven, and having done it, disap-
| pears,
But oare is imperative in selecting
the brand of baking powder to be cer-
tain that it is com 1 of non-injuri-
ous chemicals owders Sonisining
alum or those which are compound
from impure ingredients, or those
which are not combined Srapas ro.
rtion or carefully mixed and whio
will leave either an acid or an alkali in
the bread, must not be used.
1% is well to sound a note of warning
in this direction or the change from
the objectionable Jens to an impure
baking powder will be a ease of jump-
ing from the frying pan into the fire.
o best baking powder made 1s, as
shown by analysis, the “Royal” It
contains absolutely not
gi tartar und soda, refined to a chem-
: y, which when combined un-
produce earbonie acid gag, and having
done this, disappear. Its leavening
strength has been found superior to
other baking powders, and as far as I
know, it is the only powder which will
raise large bresd perfectly, Its use
avoids the long period during which
the yeast made dongh must stand in
order that the starch may ferment and
there is also no kneading necessary.
The two materials used in the Boyal,
cream of tartar and sods, are perfectly
harmless, even when eaten. But they
are combined in exact compensating
| weights, so that when chemical action
| begins between them they practically
disappear, the substance of both hav
| ing been taken up to form the carbon-
ic wmeid gas, More than this, the
proper method of using the powder
insures the most thorough mixing
with the flour. The proper quantity
| being taken, it is mixed with the flour
| and stirred around in it. The mix-
| ture then sifted several times and
| this insures that in every part of the
{ flour there shall be a few particles of
the powder. The salt and milk or wa-
ter being added, the dough is made up
as quickly ss possible and moulded
into the
in
lomves.
oven an i
moment the
the mix-
ture of cream of tartar and soda, these
These are placed in the
But the
and moisture attack
baked. very
warmth
two ingredients chemically combine
and earbonie acid or lesvenin
evolved The
Kas is
iny be
raised
the
we rect of
it.
4
i0r
COLIN (jus Lee 1
the bread is
is baking
seen at a glance,
it in
oven 1 his 1 + most
de methods of ras
all conceival
Hare, ti
§
ng
wen, there 18 no chance
nto the dough
stu
ness BEAriy an
{ germs of disease to
! and
than that the
| sweet as possi ble ’
auring
{ This involves the
get
thence Into the mach,
bread
there
which it «
t the bread
more
is
having been
sour
i 5 $11 ss 1.4
i BO Ling ad
¢ x
inet 1hs
i ‘ "1 T
£0 made wii Reep Sager, IRR
as
likely to be contaminated by the germs
{ that affect the son
It will be strange
visitors to the Worl
or
gi
tagious diseases,
treat. Unde
it not folly
eatly increase 1h
whic will have to
r thes umstances is
£ £1 ’ ir 3 ¢
I & single
channel these germs
the part of
he greatest care
all that we eat and drink, and to
that none but the saf and best meth-
] paration
fas
may reach us?
wisdom to watch
wee
BOOTS
ne answer
nestions like thes
I have shown the danger
the veast raised bread, And
danger
prevention
have shown how that
The ounce
avoided.
which in this case is
certainly
pounds of cure, and the best
about it is that it may be relied on al-
Those who eat bread
or bisenits or rolls made at home with
sy be sure they
:
:
nor expensive 1s worth many
thing
1 1 1
most absoiutely.
» 13 i " wt 1
Royal baking powder n
oy CONCEIVABLE WATS OF RAI®-
Alls
IT.
{ have absolutely stopped one channel
| through which may reach
{ them.
disease
Nore. —Housekeepers desiring informa.
tion in regard to the preparation of the bread
which, for sanitary raasons, Dr. Edson so
strongiv urges for general use, should write
to the Royal Baking Powder Company New
York.
au
Kaow Thyself,
A male adult has half an ounce of sugar
fn his blood.
The normal temperature of a humans
body is 98 2.5 degrees.
An adult perspires twenty-eight ounoes
in twenty-four hours.
An ordinary man exbales every day
one nd of carbonic oxide.
As a rule the length of the face is the
same as the length of the hand,
The rate of pulsation is 120 per min-
ute in infancy, 80 in manhoud and 60 in
old age.
Sweat consists of nearly 99 per cent.
water and a little over 1 per cent. of sal
ine matter.
Each adult inhales a gallon of air a
minute and consumes thirty ounces ol
oxygen a day.
oe action of the human heart is suffi.
ciantly strong to lift every twenty-four
hours 120 pounds,
it has been computed that the average
growth of the fin ail is about one-
second of an inch a week.
All the blood in the body makes the
entire round the circulation im
twenty seconds, so that three times
in every minute all the red globules of
the blood, which are the oxygen car-
tiers, must each have its fresh medium of