THE PALLS CITi' TRIBUNls , FRIDAY , FEBRUARYS , 1906. MUSSELS FIND MANY USES. Some Fncta About n Fnmlllnr Shell fish At Its Bent In the Spring How to Coolt Thnm. Mussels are nl llielr beat in Ihe spring. Mussels thrive in bays nud inlets , on sandy bottoniH , to which , ami to one another , they allucli by their byssus threadti , these being slender filaments issuing - ing from between the shells , says a New York writer. They are sometimes in great beds extend ing over a hundred acres , thousands - sands of bushcla of mussels being obtained in a single bed. Fishermen go for mussels as soon as the ice is out of the bays in the spring , and HomctimeH when wind and weather are pro pitious they sandwich in a trip for mussels between the end of one fishing trip and the beginning of another. There are plenty of mus sel beds within easy reaching dis tance of New York , and once on a mussel bed a load for a ten-ton sloop might be dredged tip in a single tide. So with good luck a fisherman could go to a mussel bed 20 , HO or -JO iniloH distant , and get a load of mussels , and be back in New Vork ready to sell them , all within two days. The prollt on the trip depends on what he gels for his catch. If there should be many boatloads of mussels in the market at the same time he would gel less for them ; but if he should happen to come in when musacls were scarce he would get more. If he got , say , ? 1.'J5 a barrel , about an average price , and he had from fiO to 75 barrels in his sloop and he had made a quick trip and disposed of his catch quickly there would be fair money in it. But the fisherman takes chances in mussel fishing , just as he does in every other sort of fishing. Fishermen sometimes cat inns- self ) fried , but the great bulk of mussels consumed are pickled. The mussels arc first boiled , ami then picked out of their shells , and i then what is called the beard , which consists of the inward ends | of the byssiis threads , is removed , and with it a little sac into which [ the mussel is likely to have drawn more or less sand. Then , the mussels are put up in jars in , pickle , with a few spices added. Pickled mussels have long been a familiar .item of free lunch , and I people buy them as well to carry home. The mussel is a much cheaper shellfish than the oyster or the clam , but still it is not eaten to the same extent. There are people ple with whom the mussel does not agree , because of its rich flavor. 13ut there are epicures who are fond of them , and who like to eat them occasionally , and BO mussels may be found on the bills of fare of the finest restaur ants. "Junkmen who go info the coun try buying junk sometimes take down their jangling bells and stow them away somewhere in the wagon and take into the country a wagonload of mussels , which they dispose of to farmers , trad ing the mussels , maybe , for junk. I'icklcd mussels have been shipped from New York at least as far away as Chicago ; so that altogether the quantity of mus sels disposed of in the Gotham market is considerable. Novel Wny to Kill Sharks. The engineers in the British navy have a very effective way ol [ killing sharks. They seal up u dynamite cartridge in an empt ; can , and put the can inside a large piece of pork. The pork is throwi overboard on a wire which hat . been connected with an electric battery. When the shark taket the bait the engineer presses t button , which explodes the car tridgc and kills the fish. A Beginner. He The airships do not seen to be perfected/yet. The grea problem is how can a man be kep up in the air ? She Well , I saw you out horse back riding the other day , and i looked very much as if you were i the air most of the time ! Yoi ters Statesman. HlB First Attack. She ( toying with the ring ) An am I the first woman you eve loved ? He No , indeed. At the earl age of seven I thought serlousl of eloping with my teacher. Oh cage Daily Newa. AID TO FRIENDLY QUAILS. How Farmer dlovor Fed a Flock Day After Day for Six Weeks Never Frightened Them. One cold morning Farmer Glover stood in the rear of the barn , fork in hand , looking out , over the fields , says St. Nicholas. Snowstorin had followed smow- storm , until the stone walls were so covered that the farm seemed | like a great field , with here and there a small grove to break the monotony. The cattle had been fed and each animal was munch ing contentedly at the pile of hay in the sunshine , scattering chaff over the snowy barnyard. Suddenly , from the light woods near the barn , came a startled "Hob-white ! " Immediately there was an answering call from the woods across the fields , and then another and another , and soon a flock of about 20 quail alighted on the ground , two or three roads from where Mr. 0 lover stood , and began picking up the seeds from the hay which the cattle had strewn over the snow. They scratched about like a flock of hens , and apparently quite a.s much at home , and chippercd away while they worked , after the fashion of tree sparrows in the weeds down by the brook. Farmer Glover was careful not to frighten his woodland guests , and the next morning he put out wheat for them and threw hand ftils of chair in the hay which tin- cattle had left. The flock returned again and again , until feeding th ; quails became as much a part of the day's routine as looking after the hens and turkeys. On" cold morning , after they had cat- en , the kind-hearted farmer found the whole flock huddled together 1 under the hay , apparently enjoying - ; i ing the warmth. Strange to say , they never come for food when it snows or rains. When they have breakfasted , unless frightened , they usually walk away to their favorite haunts in the grove across the fields. They never alight on the trees , but occasion ally perch on the rail fence. Once or twice , when no one was in sight , t hey came near < he house. ' For six weeks the quails enjoyed - joyed Farmer Glover's bounty. , When spring ojKMied the kind- hearted protector met them only in the fields and woods ; but when- ever bob-white's musical call J comes over the summer meadows i it brings pleasant memories of those winter breakfasts in tht > snowy barnyard. NEGRO PASTOR LIKED LATIN " Fortls" Used Colored "Aqua by Par son in Baptism of Several Brethren. Mose , a Florida negro , adds to his income as guide to sportsmen i by ministering to the spiritual 1 needs of a colored congregation of Baptists. He prides himself on his education and on his eloquent I oratorical powers , and he never misses an opportunity of im- pressinghishearcrs into believing that he is a great Latin scholar , says the Catholic Standard and Times. One evening at a fisher man's camp he listened intently , to some sportsmen who were dis ; cussing the proper pronunciation of certain Latin words and [ phrases. "Please , suh , " he finally veil lured to ask , "what am do propiih t meaning of that wo'd 'aqua ? ' " "Aqua means water , " he was answered. , "And what am'fortis ? ' " "Fortis means strong. " "Yes , suh. Thank yo' , suh , " he replied , edging away after male- ing a polite bow to his informant and then to the camp in general. The following Sunday Mose pre . sided at a baptizing , and , as usual 1 electrified his audience with a l\ \ roaring , eloquent sermon , freely interspersed with Latin ( ? ) words. . At last , with a dramatic sweep of his arms toward the river , where u few believers were soon to be ' immersed , he cried out in sten 1 it torian tones : inn "Quo Vadis , mith bredern and sistahs ? I says onto yo' unless yo be 'marged in de aqua fortis ol baptism yo' shall be lost ad in. flnitum fo' ebah. " Brandy Furnished. In the Belgian parliament iy when a member is making a lonj ' hi- < pecch , brandy and water is sup plied him at the expense of P1 government. RECLAIMING OLD TOPERS. During Drunkenness Without the Pa tient's Knowledge HUB Been Proven n Success. Can inebriety be cured by sug gestion J ? asks Public Opinion. This is a question which has been asked many times and satisfac J torily ' answered in the affirmative.E | But the question of practicing suggestion while the patient sleeps is a different proposition , and ' , therefore , a recent article in the Journal des Debats of Paris is of interest. The experiments in question were conducted by the well-known psychologist , Dr. Paul Fare"The man under observa tion refused all offers of treat ment , but notwithstanding his re fusal , against his will and un known to him , the man was cured and has remained so for four years. The patient was 25 years of age , married , of sound consti tution and average health. HP commenced drinking when he wa ? 17 years of age , and his wife had married him in order to reform him. After his marriage , how ever , he drank as before. His daily ration was two quarts of wino witli his meals , and during the day several glasses of brandy , rum. vermouth , absinthe , etc. Ordi narily the man was quiet , but when he had taken more absinthe than usual he became violent , abused his wife , broke everything within reach , and surrendered completely to his frenzy. The day following this delirium the man remembered nothing , but when told of what he had done he wept , promised to become sober , etc. The scenes , however , were soon re peated. "Dr. Farer decided to try , with the approval of the family of the patient , suggestion during nat ural sleep. The treatment took place four or five times per week , and , although the patient did not know what was going on , there | was slow and steady improve ment. The treatment commenced in January. Up to April the man had been intoxicated only three times. In April and May there were no acts of violence ; in June and July slight intoxications on two occasions ; in August and Sep tember a trip to the country , but ' no wine during this time , only j beer. Returning to Paris , the man did not go to a cafe , but drank n I little absinthe and less than ' quart of absinthe for nil of his meals. After a year the only thing taken was a little absinthe on Sunday and Saturday , and I from this time the patient has not touched wine and has only taken a little absinthe once or twice n month and at home. He is no longer irritable , but happy and a regular worker. Tlie treatment had to be continued for 18 months , hut the result is complete and the patient entirely transformed. He has gained control of his will and is gentle and affectionate. " ST. PETERSBURG IS GAY. With or Without War Enjoyment Goes on in the Russian Cnp- ' Hal's Society. War or no war , the aristocratic Russian pursues his pleasures with an abandonment that speaks of unlimited resources or unlimit- ed recklessness. The pleasures of the fable are protracted to an in , ordinate degree. A lunch , in which the courses are plentifully watered with champagne , will [ l spread itself through the after noon. You may barely escape at five o'clock , though you began to eat at one. The host never sits down , plying his guest with a suc cession of good things , liquid and solid. Even the afternoon tea in middle-class circles is a very for midable undertaking. It includes 5 dishes of various sorts , in which meat will certainly figure , and Russian tea , served in a glass with lemon , is but the pale comparison to sparkling champagne. The ap. pearance of the streets tells of f wealth , too. No finer equipages ? 0exist anywhere than those which horsed with coal-black steeds , dash at full spced , in lofty disre gard for the mere foot passenger down the central strip of wood pavement in the principal "pros pects , " as the wider streets n rede . " nominated. Holding the reins ii his two hands , with arms out ! saretched , the driver , medieval 111 dress , has the summary method- , of a Roman charioteer. Indeed there is something of imperia - Rome in the second capital of thi 1 czar. RARE STAMPS ON LETTERSj _ . I Finds of Value Sometimes Made Stamps to Look Out For Ad- vlco of n Dealer. "Never burn up or throw away old letters or papers without first giving them a careful examina tion , " said u Twenty-third street stamp dealer to a New York Sun reporter ' , "for them's many an apparently worthless piece of pa per that bears a stamp which would bring in open market hun dreds and maybe thousands of dollars. "There arc plenty of the old postmaster stamps still in exist ence , for instance , as there were a great many of them originally is sued , and it has not been so lon ago , say 85 years , when they were iti active tise. Now , anyone of these early issues is worth from ? ; ] 00 up. Anyone who has arces.- fo old correspondence from IStl ) lo ISO.1 * ought to hunt for such stumps. "The chief reason why more of these old stamps have not coim- to light is probably ( hat they have so ordinary and unattractive an .ippearance that a person not ac quainted wifh their value would not waste a second glance upon them. They were very similar in most cases to the postmaster cancellation collation marks now in use in the post ollU-es , with the exception hat the postmaster was requited o sign his name to them. "The rarest of the whole lot of ) ostmaster issues is the ten-cent Jaltimorc stamp , with the name if James 31. Buchanan. One spe cimen of tliisstamp sold for $ -1,500 , which is the record price for a stamp of the United States issue. There's no reason in the world why there shouldn't be more of these stamps packed away some where. In the case of this stamp none of them was used on envel opes , but all on letters. "The design of the Baltimore stamp is a box made of hairline rule , one and a half inches long and half an inch wide. In the cen ter is the signature , 'James M. Bu chanan , ' while under the name is the denomination , either five or ten cents. There are two kinds of these stamps , in black or blue. The ten-cent black is the scarcer. "Next to this series probably comes the New Haven stamp , at the bottom of which is the signa ture of 'E. A. Mitchell , P. M. ' In the center is the figure 5 with the word 'Paid' directly under neath. At the top are the words 'Post Office , New Haven , Ct. ' The words are all inclosed in a black- border with a small curve at the corners. " PARSON BIRD IN ZEALAND. The To ! of That Country Can Talk , Crow and Whistle Some of Its Customs. Among the feathered inhabit ants of New Zealand there is a bird called'the parson bird , or "tui. " It is about the size and shape of a blackbird , but has a pair of delicate white tufts at its throat , and is a glossy dark green otherwise , which looks black in the sunshine. It can be taught to crow , to speak , to whistle tunes , and besides these tricks it has a repertoire which is not often equaled by any other feathered songster. At vespers it has a note like the tone of a bell or the clear high note of an , organ. It can mimic every bird in the bush to j perfection ; it will break off in the i middle of an exquisite melody t' ' and indulge in a strange medley of sounds which are impossible to de- scribe , but'if you can imagine "the combination of a cough , a laugh , a sneeze , with the smashing of a pane of glass , " it will be some ap preach to the idea. I The tui nests twice or thrice a year , and has large families. Like the other birds of New Zealand it seems to be unconscious of dan- ger from man. 11 is a pity that the . birds of this island are becoming so scarce , fo'r they speak to us of a time when nature was harmless , , , when the snake , tigers and fal- , cons did not exist. I Counsel's Record Fee , ' What is probably a record fee Las just been earned by a distin ° guishcd counsel in an important t' colonial arbitration case. The fee paid to the learned counsel was 25,000 guineas. This puts into the shade the 10,000 guineas Mr * Fletcher Moulton received for con 1 ducting the case of one of the com ' panics in the Metropolitan Watei company's arbitration. FOR SALEi s Best Bargain in an 80 acre Farm in Rich = ardson County. This So is all good , smooth land , 2 story 8 room house , nearly new , considerable outbuildings of various kinds , small orchard , fine soft water , fine neighborhood , beautiful loca tion , only i l/t miles from Falls City , over a fine level road. This 80 sold three years ago for $100 per acre , and was sold this fall for $9,000. We will sell this So for only $8,500and let the wheat and fall plowing go with the place. It must be rented if not sold soon. An 80 acres 6 miles from this town sold last week for $8- * , 800 , co you see that the above 80 is a bargain , and could not be sold for this money but for the fact it has been traded for by a big land company. Can make good terms at 5 per - - i , cent. Come quick as this fine 80 must go. -4 . j Don't make vour farm loan until vou have seen us , as we \ " ' \ \ have cheap money. If you have a farm or other property / that you want to trade for other land , call and see us. A 200 f acre farm for rent. WHSTAKER BROS. OSTEOPATHY ! For the information of those who desire to know more about the science of osteopathy we give a brief explanation of a few points which seem to be least understood. Osteopathy is a scientific sys tem of therapeutics , comprising the most natural and advanced methods of treating : and manag ing the diseases of the human body , both acute and chronic , without the use of drugs. WHAT OSTEOPATHY IS NOT. Osteopathy is Jiot massage , not magnetism , not "rubbing , " not a faith cure ; it is not an adjunct to anj' other system of healing- , nor is it taug-ht in the colleges of any other system. Osteopathy is an independent and complete system founded by Andrew Taylor Still , M. D. , president of the American School of Osteopathy at Kirks- ville , Mo. STANDING OK OSTEOPATHY. The remarkable results ob * taincd in practice distinguished osteopath } ' as a therapeutical science , and advanced it in public confidence to a degree never equalled by' any other system in so short a time. Its patrons are the intelligent a n d thinking classes of a community and in. elude thousands who have been saved from hopeless invalidism. Although generally known to the public less than ten years , osteopathy has won its way be fore the legislatures and courts of nearly two-thirds of the states in the Union , and has the distinc tion of being designated a science by the legislative acts of a num ber of states , among which are Nebraska , Missouri , Michigan , North Dakota , Tennessee , Iowa , California and Montana. No other system of healing has ever been declared to be a science by a state legislature. Osteopathy is taught in i do/ien different schools in the United States , and its practitioners , num bering nearly ten thousand , are found in every state and territory in the Union , in Canada , Austra lia and other foreign countries , HASIC PRINCIPLES. When the founder of osteopa thy evolved the basic principles of'the science twenty-eight years ago , he based his philosophy on the mechanical law , that de ranged action implies a defect in the structural elements of the machine. " Exercising confidence in the integrity of the human body and in the completeness of its creation , he set about to dem onstrate that the natural re- ' sources of the body are capable of manufacturing on demand every chemical and combination needed to carry on the processes . of the body and maintain health ; that the same natural processes which normally maintain Jicalth , will also restore health when en abled to operate without interfer ence ; that the brain and spinal cord contain an almost unlimited supply of vital energy ready and waiting to be distributed to the diseased tissues when the proper avenues are opened. He discovered % ered that these chemicals and combinations are not understood and cannot be imitated or approached preached in all the laboratories of science. Since the nervous system presides over the processes of the body , and since function , whether normal or abnormal , is ' the expression or vital manifesta tion of the instrument ( physical being ) , he reasoned that deranged function ( disease ) implies a de fect in the structures of the body , and that by properly adjusting the abnormal structural condi tion , function becomes harmon ized. OSTEOPATHIC EDUCATIONr The course of study in .the ostcopathic colleges include the subjects taught in all the regular colleges of medicine , except drugs , and in addition the principles and practice of osteop athy and special anatomy and nerve physiology. Students are required to attend a full course of lectures in each branch and pass satisfactory examinations. NATURE OK THE TREATMENT. Pediculous tales are sometimes told by prejudiced persons of ex posure of the body , danger to the patient , severity of treatment , etc. , all of which are without foundation. The treatment is not severe and there is no indeli cacy about it. Osteopaths do not remove the clothing of the patient to give a treatment or to make an examination. Since osteopathy recognizes the integrity of the human body and is base ; ' on a physical adjust ment of the body-structures , the treatment is largelv manipula- , tive. After finding and detenui ining the nature of the lesions , the osteopath uses whatever manipulations he chooses to cor rect the abnormal structural con dition. DISEASES TREATED. This science treats all diseases , acute and chronic. It cures any curable disease , and many hereto fore regarded as incurable. It benefits many crhonic diseases that it does not cure. The di seases with which osteopathy has been especially successful are : acute fevers , rheumatism , neu ralgia , appendicitis , diseases of throat and lungs , nervous di seases , disease of stomach , liver and intestines , and diseases pecu liar to women and children. DR. O. H. KENT , GRADUATE AMERICAN SCHOOL OF OSTEOPATHY OSTEOPATHIC PHYSICIAN Ofllce at Residence , one JJlock west of Union Hotel