The Butler Weekly Times Newspaper, January 11, 1906, Page 12

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cities, although many large growers Pcggemer to sell entirely by contract or CHEW FOODS THOROUGHLY, y special orders to hotels and rest- s aurants. The farmer, however, will| GLADSTONE CHEWED MEAT find ready sale for any of the standard} THIRTY-TWO TIMES—OTHERS varieties. Should basement or cellar RECOMMEND FIFTY. be unavailable, open-air culture may be resorted to, although this method GUY ELLIOTT MITCHELL. Certain Indigestion Preventative— Less Food Well Masticated Fur-| nishes More Nourishment for Body | ~—Saliva A Digestive. Gladstone chewed every mouthful of meat he ate thirty-two times, but sixty times is not too often to chew a mouth. ful of solid food, according to a well- known specialist on stomach diseases, beginners are often as successful with who declares that it is the one sure them as are those having an extensive : : way to avoid indigestion, stomach and experience. Aside from preparing the : ] intestinal troubles, manure and making up the beds, it is i . “Each mouthful should be chewed a clean crop to handle and occupies lit- from fifteen to sixty seconds, accord tle space, The gathering, sorting, pack- | S ing to the kind of solids it contains,” ing and marketing of the mushrooms } he says. “Every piece should be this question by saying that you can-| can be easily taken care of by the wom- ground into fine pulp and thoroughly not tell a mushroom from a toadstool | en of the household, : 3 mixed with the saliva in the mouth because mushrooms are toadstools.] Cellars or basement rooms where the before it is in a condition to be prop- The general belief is well-nigh univer-| temperature in the winter does not go erly digested. Swallowing should be #al in this country that the fleshy um-| below 55 degrees or does not rise above & slow, almost formal action, for if a brella-shaped fungi are divided into] 65 degrees are suitable places for grow- bite is gulped down even after it has two classes—mushrooms, which are|ing mushrooms, It is hardly advisable been well masticated it will cause dis edible, and toadstools, which are poi-|to grow them under the living part of tress by lodging in the thorax for a sonous. The assumed difference does | the house, since the odor of the manure few seconds and bringing on a dull not exist. All fleshy umbrella-shaped| will permeate the dwelling. Stables heaviness in the chest and stomach, fungi are toadstools; a number of these | that are not too cold in winter are “Some foods should be more thor are edible, and commerce applies the | suitable. . 3 ey gee gear emer ae name mushroom; but not a small num- - ce, , veal, mutton—in fact, ber of other toadstools are edible, and Preparation of the Bede, all heavy foods should be chewed for @ great many of them, probably the The mushroom bed is best prepared at least a minute, while soft cereals, from horse manure that comes from mushes and well-cooked vegetables well-bedded stables. Some straw is de- need not be held in the mouth for more . 0 swallow. The manure is cured by putting it un-| VENTILATOR OF PARISIAN MUSH- coffee, ilk, wine, wees der cover in piles three to four feet deep ROOM CAVE. drunk slowly. Five minutes at least and of any length and width, It usu-|of growing is more difficult owing to} should be given over to the slow sip: ally requires from ten to fifteen days to] the impossibility of maintaining even | ping of a cup of fluid, whether it is hot cure, but should not be put in the beds| temperatures and controlling the moist-| or cold, for a quantity suddenly put or boxes until the temperature has|ure of the beds. The various bulletins |into the stomach is not healthful, and Many people who would enjoy mush- rooms added to their menu are de barred because of the difficulty of ob- taining them except at considerable! expense, and because of unfamiliarity as to methods of home culture. Mushrooms are easy to grow, and | . “Mushroom Growing and Mushroom ~, Spawn Making” is the title of a very interesting bulletin just issued by the _ Department of Agriculture. This is & subject which, to most farmers, is Surrounded by a haze of mystery and What is it that you most want or most value in your life? Isn't it good heaith or sume’ 5% Ri ed have good health to get? What then is guod health worth to you What howe Ay you give to avoid a day’s sickness, after the sickness “had come? “An Ounce of Prevention is Worth a Pound of Cure.” il d the health ¢ in Maxwell's Homemaker Magazine every month, for ph gee Mak tole ts teachings, you will never need to be sick or to pay a doctor's bill. What would that be worth to you? Wouldn't it be worth ten dollars? 3 ee it weale. that. Well you can save $9.90 by reading Maxwell's Homemaker Seganine for one year, The Magazine will cost you just ten cents, No more—No less hesitation, owing to the fact that there are a number of species of mushrooms which are poisonous. Determining the Poisonous Fungi. The first question a man will ask is “How can | tell a toadstool from a mushroom?” The Department answers And Then About Cooking. You've heard the old saying: “The Lord sends the food and the Devil the cooks." Good Cooking Contributes to Good Health. As Shakespeare says: “Let good digestion wait on appetite, health on both." Did you ever hear of good digestion waiting on bad cooking ? Bad ¥feaith goes with nd cooking, And the Home Cooking Department in Maxwell’s Homemaker Magazine is an aid to the Good Health Department. Good Cooking and Good Heglith! They're The Gold Dust Twins that make the work of life easy and lead us on through happy and@ useful years to a hale and hearty old age. Sit right down—NOW-—and send your dime, or five two-cent stamps, so as to get this magazine ONE WHOLE YEAR FOR TEN CENTS. - The Good Health and Good Cooking Departments.in Maxwell's Homemaker Magazine are not edited with a pair of scissors. They are edited with a set of brains, backed up by a life-time of study and experience, And what it has to tell is told in a plain, straightforward way that everybody can understand and know just what to do to enjoy Good Cooking and Good Health, When you send your subscription, write your name and post office address so lainty thet you will sure it will be entered right, and send with it One Dime or Five Twe-Cent Stamps to eee MAXWELL’S HOMEMAKER MAGAZINE, 1409 FISHER BUILDING, CHICAGO. son should be more thoroughly masti- a cated.” 9 Chewing food thoroughly accom- plishes the double results of mincing it so that the juices of the stomach r} can get at the individual particles and : combining it with the saliva, which, in AMERICAN CROWN itself, is a powerful digestive agent. —_—_—_—_——e Worse Than Welch Rarebit, S O A P Microbes in the water, . Microbes in the air; ’ ; THE FLY AGARIC. : Deadly Poison and Closely Resembles the Edible Mushroom. most of them, are not poisonous, Abil- ity to distinguish poisonous varieties from those that are edible is not eas- ily learned. On the other hand those who wish to collect fungi for their own consumption or the market must be gin by committing to memory the dis- tinguishing marks of a few species. Microbes in the pie and cake, ' Until this is done one must not ven- Microbes aeerthice: 4s. green soap, consistency of paste, a perfect ture to trust to general rules for dis- Laying for us in the cold, cleanser for automobile machinery and all tinguishing good species from bad. Likewise in the heat; vehicles; will not injure the most highly There is one rule, however, which Every time we draw our breath Polished surface, Made from pure vegetable should be applied: no one, unless de- Or stop to drink or eat. oils, If your dealer does not carry American Crown Soap in stock, send ushis name and address anc We will see that your wants are Supplied. Put up in 12} 95 and 80 lb pails, cidedly expert, should collect for eat- ing the buttons, or small, unexpanded fungi, since in their young condition it is often impossible, even for experts, to recognize what the species is. The Department of Agriculture has issued @ number of bulletins on mushroom growing which give certain rules for determining the difference between the edible common field mushrooms and those that are deadly poisonous. This subject is particularly treated in the Year Book for 1897; reprints of this portion can be obtained from the Divi- sion of Publications. Tn horrid consternation ere vainly ial to ett i 'e know that through the casemen! . The Microbes strive to creep; 2 Though as creation’s mighty lords James S. Kirk & Company tg We swagger and pretend, CHICAGO, IL. The Microbe is the only one Who triumphs in the end, ——~——— |Foster’s Ideal No Four Flushing. ' The President stands pat on the American navy. And yet he maintains - C ib Phe mushroom in commerce is prac- that it needs constant revision. Now ri Ss . tically the fruit of the mushroom i Levy the pone beng ir plant, and not the plant itself. The SCENES IN SOME OF THE GREAT MUSHROOM CAVES OF P. ¥ and work it out by the use of a le plant proper is a white or bluish white orn midnight Rockefeller. /Accident Proof. mold—the spawn—that grows in fields |82¢ down to 100 degrees, A layer and manure piles. Comparing the|of the more strawy portion of the STOP YOUR RUNAWAY LS LSE ESI @ NONE GENUINE a You Can Do it eu een ng mushroom to an apple tree, we have | manure is first put on the bottom and With GEER SAFETY REIN ——— the trunk, branches and leaves buried in the ground, leaving only the apples then thoroughly tramped or pounded PRICE, COMPLETE, $5.00 Expressage Prepaid di b | down. Succeeding layers are then ap- Oihe,tondstool, Uke the apple, eon: plled and each packed down until the he ae is 10, or nches deep, Cul- = oy piv 4 tivated mushroom ‘pawn, used. for|Method of Slaughtering Which In- stool is filled with microscopic, dust-|Planting the beds, may be obtained sures Wholesome Meat. Better to Eat Little. like bodies having the same function ag | {TM nearly any seedsman in the form) A Kansas City man has discovered| “If the time that can be devoted toa seods, of dried manure bricks. These should|a novel mothod of preparing pork for|meal is short,” he says, “It would be No more Smash-ups; Ne more ea Lest; Can be buckled WORKS INDEPENDENTLY OF THE DRIVING Reins, °"|"* minute, to any Bride: " Write for descriptive circular, tree on application, te THE GEER MANUFACTURING Co., 47 EXCHANGE PLACE, NEW YORK. Will Stop any Horse or Money Refunded, of the Department of Agriculture on frequently causes an uncomfortable mushroom growing may be obtained fullness, which, if continued, results in on application. a form of indigestion.” big! wineiont Girestions of one fond _ nent specia! on ve troubles TO MAKE PERFECT PORK. are, in most every Brn gn wird comes to him, to eat much less and chew it more, be broken up into pieces about 2 inches|the market in a way that will give to| well to remember that a small quantity Important Crop Abroad. in diameter, planting each piece-in the} the- people a meat- which is ‘of-nourishing food, properly masti- Mushrooms are extensively grown in| bed 8 to 10 inches apart by making a| wholesome, The theory is advanced | cated, {s more beneficial than a larger England and France, and to a limited | suitable hole 2 inches deep and press-|that when a pig is sent to slaughter,|amount poorly chewed and swallowed extent in Belgium, Germany and in|ing the spawn firmly into it. The hole|every squeal emitted in the process of}in a hurry. The best plan I know is other countries. Paris, however, |should then be again filled with the|slaughter is an audible announcement | to leave the table without entirely sat- 4s the center of commercial production. | manure and packed down firmly. The/| of a nervous reaction that effects every |istying one’s hunger, while another In the vicinity of that city the culture | bed is covered loosely with excelsior or| fiber of its body, producing such|baked apple or piece of beef would f mushrooms is now almost entirely'straw to retain the moisture and to|changes as will be detrimental to any | taste good. 2 one partaking of the flesh, The plan} “Dinner being the principal meal of proposed is to drive the porker up an|the day, more solid foods are generally incline into a small pen, Just as he|served, and for that reasom alone more steps ts os pen the platform i and cer uit Ne Eee sating Tis had w runs him down a chute, At the end nutes shou ven in tak- l i { H C of this chute there is a bucket of slop ing Ley By te be Comet y Mong nternat ona arvester 0. or mash, or any other pig delicacy, according : The animal pokes his snout into the|dividual desire. Many persons believe GASOLINE ENGINES bucket when his whole head is caught |that milk should always be chewed. $ in a trap and nitrous oxide renders ao on in the + ng as BY ic orvipned A Ney a eantsadl ne pia farm, the , the ‘ D ger, . convenient, oul i" more him unconscious before he has time sity thas than with any ott en F wWhi-hove os to let out littl eal. While}be used in eating meats, veg- the pig is in this state it iealaughtered, letables, ete, and the remainder ‘Wood to saw, feed to grind or cora.to.shell, can do this work at There is no excitement, no squeal and|0f the period given over to the mas- consequently no thermic changes, tication of deserts, which, if of pastry use, - . ee any The Streauoas Life. “Indeed, Mr. Hurryup, this is so un- You embarrass me very Hurryup (glancing at the clock) “Tl give you one minute to recover i} | from your embarrassment.” le “Mama, were you at home when I was born.” ‘ “No, dear, I, was at grandma's in *|the country.” . of tempera-| “Wasn't you awf'ly s'prised when week | you heard about it?” are not unlike some of our mines Alleries or halls radiating in tion. Most of these are well

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