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  • LEFT PAGE 334 [left column] JOBS THAT HAVE PECULIAR NAMES Coyote Hole Drillers, Bis- cuit Brakemen, Peelers, Buckers, Swampers Seekers after employment in Seattle are sometimes steered up against some peculiar jobs. It is all right for the ex- perienced hand who has been "thru the mill," but the youngester starting out for a job at any old thing is sometimes more or less puzzled bu the micellaneous nomenclature of the employment office. If he is wise he will get some old-timer to explain it to him, but if not he is like- ly to butt in directly and ask for some job that he doesn't want at all--provided he goes simply by the advertisements or the placards pasted up in front of the office of the man who is giving out the jobe. For the man who gives out jobs calls things by their shortest names, speaks in terms of the trades, and the technical tone of some of these names is something wonderful, not to say mistleading, to the proletariat, or, perhaps, it would be bet- ter to say, to the layman. Sam Houston would probably have advised the jobless man to "Be sure you know what the job is before you go and ask for it." Drilling Coyote Holes The occupation of "boring drills for coyote holes" may not be complicated enough to disqualify the average man who is looking for a job, but the name is rather misleading to the layman. The gentle reader of some of the advertise- ments of the employment agents in the daily papers might be led to believe from the name of the job that some eccentric- ally philanthropic farmer on the plains had decided to carve out residences for the coyotes who furnish nightly music, whether it is wanted or not. The man who drills the coyote hole is not doing that kind of work, and his employer is not a farmer at all, but usually a rail- road man, and the work is not done on the plains, as a general thing, but in the hills, or at least where heavy grades have to be cut. The name of the job comes, however, from the character of the hole which is bored--a T-shamed hole, similar in outline to the dugout o the pest of the plains. These holes are driven in straight, like a tunnel, to be filled with powder from 300 to 1,000 sacks, according to the size of the hole and the nature of the ground or rock which has to be removed. The work is usually done on a railroad grade, in blasting off the side of a hill to prepare for the laying of a track. From $5 to $8 a foot is paid to the drillers, ac- cording to the relative difficulty of the work. Biscuit Brakeman and Peeler Another job which looked something like a lottery to the man who applied for it was that of "biscuit brakeman and peeler; must be sober and steady," ad- vertised for by a Vancouver company. The job looked like a cross between rail- road and bakery work, and men with experience in each of the lines confessed themselves puzzled as to the prospective duties of such a position. It was finally decided that the job was a cookhouse stunt and that either the boss wanted the biscuits railrided to his hungry men, or else that the workd "brakeman" should have appeared as "bakerman." "Peeler" might have referred to a man to remove the cuticle from a sawlog or from a batch of potatoes in the cookhouse; the latter interpretation was put upon it by some of the applicants for the position. Left-Handed Knee Bolter "Left-handed knee-bolters" may re- joice that they have a profession the name of which gives the rank outsider a decidedly bum steer. Shingle weavers however, will tell you that the knee-bolt- er is the man who operates a saw that shapes the blocks up ready for the saw that cuts them into shingles--cutting away the sap and the rough edges of the clocks. The carriage on which the block rests is porpelled across the saw by a push of the operator's knee, while he holds the block steady with his hand. Those who use the left hand are styled left-hand knee bolters. Buckers and Doggers A college education would be of only indirect advantage to a man who was after a job as a "bucker," for the bucking that is done by the left half of the full- back is not the sort that is in demand at $3 per. Thes "buckers" who are sent out by the employment agents have the vary prosy occupation of cutting the log up into lengths after the fallers have felled the tree. Then there are the positions as "doggers on carriage" for which [$2.35] per day is paid, [middle column] The name of the occupation would hardly suggest to the general public whether a man was to work for a transfer comany or not--carriage might suggest it, but what is a "dogger"? "That's easy," says the lumberman. "He's the fellow that drives in the dogs." "Oh yes, drives in the dogs--a sort of dog catcher. Not for me--even at $2.35 per and a carriage thrown in. No canines for mine." In real truth, the "dogs" are driven in with a sledge hammer or something similar, and the process is not necessarily cruel, as they are a kind of n iron picaroon at the end of a chain and are driven into the log to hold it on the carriage which car- ries the log to the saw. The dogger rides on, and not in, a carriage. A shoddy mill man is paid only about $1.50 per day, but the shoddy doesn't re- fer to the kind of a man, but to the kind of a mill. He works in a place where they tear up last year's summer suits and other discarded garments for use as stuffing for mattresses. Swamping Not Malarial Work The man who works as a "swamper" isn't necessarily in danger of malaria or even of mosquito bite. He doesn't always work in a swamp, altho that is the prob- able derivation of the term. He is the advance agent of the logger or the road builder. He falls trees and cuts out some- thing of a road to make room for the op- erations of the men to follow. Notwith- standing the fact that the ork is health- ful and good exercise, generous employers are paying as high as $2.50 per day and over as a further inducement to those whose talents lie in that line. Flunkeys and Poets Then there is the flunkey. His is a po- sition of even more real dignity than the name implies. He is the waiter or the assistant cook in a logging camp or mill cookhouse, and he gets $35 a month and his board. Occosionally there are no vacancies as flunkeys, and at such times such a po- sition as "poet to write song words," which is often advertised in the classified columns might prove a life-saver. Com- pensation for this sort of work is not al- ways stated but the amount per foot or yard or poound may be ascertained by communicating with the publishers who are usually located in New York or some other city where the composer isn't. There are other things which the seeker after a job of "any old kind" might try, but the above are probably amont the least intelligible to the man who has never worked at them in the most in- telligeble to others. --- CAKE TURNER Press the Spring and the Griddle Cake Is Reversed. The housewife seldom experiences any trouble in turning her griddle or batter cakes, but to make the operation easier a Pennsylvania man has invented the novel cake turned shown in the illustration. Turaing the handle to turn the cake is not neccessary with this device. All that is required is to press a spring after the cake has been put on the lifter and the [illustration of device with "May 2 1906" handwritten] turning is done automatically. The cake turner is made in two parts--the handle secion and the lifter section. The latter comprises the cake turner and the rod con- necting it to the handle. At the end of the rod is a beveled pinion which fits into a sector pivoted to the side of the handle, the sector being made into one piece with a finger piece. Attached to the sector is a coiled spring, which keeps the turner in its normal position. After placing a batter cake on the turner, the finger piece is pressed, the latter moving the sector, which in turn engages with the bevel gear on the end of the rod. The sector being of a predetermined size, a half revolution is imparted to the turner. Releasing the finger piece returns the turner to its nor- mal position. --- [right column] PUZZLES FOR TELEGRAPHERS "What a layman doesn't know about telegraphy would fill an encyclopedia," said John L. McCague who was an operator in the days of his boyhood. "Now, Alex Carlto there, one of my partnersk, doesn't know any more about telegrapny than a cat, and I'll prove it. Once I had him prepare a code for use in our correspondence, both for secrecy and to reduce telegraph charges. When he handed it to me, I found the word 'sheep,' and directly opposite it the meaning, 'money re- ceived and deed given.' "'Look here, Carlton,' I said. 'The operator who receives that 'sheep' will get a regular b-r-r-r-r. He can't tell whether it is sheep or cows, likely. Don't you know that 'sheep' is a string of fourteen dots, without a dash to re- lieve the monotony? 'S' is three dots, 'h' is four dots, 'e' is one dot and 'p' is five dots,'" "That's nothing," said a telegrapher at strike headquarters, when Mr. Mc- Cague's story was repeated to him. "If you want a string of dots forty-five feet long, give 'em 'Mississippi,' The 'M' gives you two dashes to start with, and then you get thirty dots in succes- sion. The fellow who receives it can't tell whether he is getting thirty dots or fifty. He doesn't know whether it is the Lord's prayer or the Declaration of Independence." --Omaha Bee --- DECEMBER 26, 1906 --- SEEING CARDS BY TELEPHONE A Swindle That Is Said to Have Had Many Victims NEW YORK--The "telephone game" is being worked in the boroughts of Brooklyn and Queens. The game con- sits in the operator betting some cheerful "comeon" that he has a friend a professor, who can read any card in the pack over a telephone. The swin- dle is carried out by means of a code, every card in the pack being designated by some common name of a man. When it comes to deciding the bet the operator simply calls up a confederate on the telephone and he tells the card selected. By way of example, take the ten of diamonds, the code name for which is "Marvin." "Is Prof. Marvin there?" inquires the operator. After some delay, "Prof. Marvin," the confederate, begins a se- ries of small talk over the phone which finally winds up by the "Prof." informing the dupe that the card he holds in his hand is the ten of dia- monds The game is generally carried on in saloons, tobacco stores, barber shops and other such places. The operator whisks into the place rubbing his hands and by way of making an open- ing among the crowd begins: "Wonderful! Wonderful! Never saw anything like it! Never!" "What's eating you?" inquires the cheerful comeon. "Nothing, nothing." answers the op- erator. "Have something; cold day, Wonder- ful, as I was remarking. He reads a card over the telephon just as easily as you can read that sign before your eyes. Don't make any difference how many miles away. He is over in Man- hattan today. Just ask what card you hold in your hand and in a minute he has the answer. With a few more remarks the opera- tor has someone in the crowd betting him from 50 cents to $20 that the feat is impossible. The money is posted very often a capper who has entered the place beforehand being made the stakeholder Then a pack of cards is produced and the victim is asked to pick out any card he likes. Of course everybody in the place knows the card. "Now call up your professor friend and let's see him do this great feat." demads the capper. The victim holds say, the four of spades. The operator pretends to look up the "professor's" number in the telephone book, Then he calls up his confederate. "Smith" is the code name for the four of spades. "Is Prof. Smith there?" and after some delay the voice at the other end finally announces that the professor is at the telephone. "Professor, I have a friend here who is skeptical about your ability to read cards through the phone. He wants you to tell him what card he holds in his hand." According to those who have been through the game, the "professor" is reluctant to comply, but finally con- sents to read, "just one card, just one." Then, after a series of manipulations in which the man holding the card is told to hold it near the transmitter, then toward the light and so back and forth several times, the "professor" an- nounces that the card is the four of spades. The money is paid over and the operator glides out of the place in search of other victims.--Sun. --- RIGHT PAGE [left column] COMMON ERRORS AS TO MUSHROOMS Popular Methods for Telling Poisonous Kinds Found Wanting From the London Lancet. The distinctions between edible and pois- onous mushrooms are usually based on empirical ground, with the result that mistakes of a serious nature may, and often do occur. The subject has recently received the attention of Prof. Labesse, who has described the characters where- by edible and poisonous mushrooms are distinguished in various localities. Many popular tests for determining the whole- someness or otherwise of a mushroom are based on color, odor, taste and texture; on the presence of rose colored lemeliae or a milky juice; on the situation in which the fungi grow, and on the action of the mushrooms on various substances includ- ing gold and silver coins, milk and onions. Thus, according to one popular notion, mushrooms having a blue, violet, [green?] or red color are unfit for food, but [the?] test would exclude many wholesome fungi, including the green Russula and the green Clytocybe. It has been said that only mushrooms which do not change color when cut are good to eat, but Lac- tarius delicious, some species of Boletus, and many other mushrooms which change color are perfectly harmless while, on the other hand, Amanita muscaria and some other fungi which do not change color when cut should be avoided. Prof. Labesse points out that the pres- ence of an agreeable odor is not an infal- lible test of a good mushroom, as a spe- cies of Amanita (l'Amanite phalloide) is especially dangerous in spite of its pleasant odor. There is a dictum among certain amateur gatherers that a good mushroom has a gateful taste. This test is useful in many cases, but not in all-- e.g. l'amanite phalloide and la fausse Oronge (Amanita muscaria) are scarcely bitter but quite unfit for eating. As regards to texture it is generally re- garded that compact, brittle mushrooms with a dry skin are edible but Prof. Labesse considers this to be a mere pre- judice, as the eating of certain species of Russia would seriously indispose any- one placing confidence in those charac- ters. Mushrooms with rose colored lameliae are usually considered to be edible, but this is a false notion, some species of Volvaria and other poisonous fungi possessing this character. Mush- rooms with a milky juice are regarded as dangerous by some collectors, but this rule must not be followed too literally as many excellent members of the genus Lactarius would thereby be excluded. The situation in which mushrooms grow is a very uncertain criterion of edibility. Thus it would be dangerous to regard all mushrooms growing in meadows, open fields and roadsides as good, since many suspected kinds grow in such places. On the other hand, mushrooms growing in coniferous woods and under trees gen- erally have been condemned, but the suc- culent Lactarius deliciousus grows in con- iferous woods and the edible Phoilota grows under poplars while species of hel- vella and Hudrum which flourish in shady woods, form a wholesome dish. The blackening of a gold or silver coin or ring does not prove a mushroom to be poisonous; the blackening is generally due to more or less decay in the mush- room as fresh mushrooms, whether pois- onous or not, fail to blacken these metals. The curdling of milk by mushrooms is another property which has nothing in common with toxicity, the cause of the curdling being attributable to the pres- ence of an acid or a ferment. An old custom consisted in dipping a white onion or a clove of garlic into the cooking ves- sel containing the mushrooms and noting whether the latter turned brown or not. The presumption that only noxious mush- rooms are turned brown by this treat- ment is not justifiable, since some non- poisonous varieties do change color in [continues at top of middle column] --- 23, 29, 30 [illegible, text cut off] of Topeka, June 16, 30 Steamers connect at San Francisco with Company's steamers for ports in Califor- nia, Mexico and Humboldt Bay. For fur- ther information obtain folder. Right is reserved to change steamers or sailing dates. TICKET OFFICES--96 Government and 61 Wharf Street. R.P. Rithet & [and] Co.[company], Ltd., Agents C. D. DUNANN, Gen. Pass. Agt. San Francisco. [This last clipping is loose in the scrapbook and should have been photographed at the top of the right column other side up. It has been transcribed there, too] --- [middle column] this way while some poisonous varieties do not. It is a common belief thatslugs and insects attack edible mushrooms, but this is by no means universally true, as the deadly Amanitas are attacked by slugs while many wholesome fungi are respected by these depredators. The tests so far described are laregely of a rule-of-thumb nature, but another test which has received wide acceptance depends upon the fact that many pois- onous fungi are surrounded by a velum universale, notable examples being the intensely poisonous subgenera Volvaria and Amanita and the puffballs. But, like all other rules, this is open to exceptions including the genus agaricus, to which the common mushroom, A. campestris belongs. Prof. Labesse considers that there are no practical empirical means by which amateurs may, with confidence, de- cide whether an unknown fungus is good to eat. There is often a risk taken in eating mushrooms, and those who do not wish to incur the risk are reminded by Prof. Labesse of the method adopted by Gerard in 1850. He boiled the mushrooms for some time in sald water, throw away the water, and exposed the mushrooms to the air. He fed his family for nearly a month upon all kinds of poisonous mushrooms treated in this way and found them to be nutritious, tho less palatable than mushrooms cooked in the ordinary way. Prof. Labesse suggests that not more than one mushroom in ten is pois- onous, and that the best test consists in rejecting those which have a ring at the base of the stipe. Deadly mushrooms, as a rule, posess a ring or annulus consist- ing of the remains of the Velum partiale which covers the young mushroom and is fractured during growth. In order to apply this test, the mushrooms must be gathered with care. Unfortunately in rejecting mushrooms posessing this character some excellent varieties are rejected in addition to the commonest poisonous varieties. Ama- teurs shoudl know the characters of mushrooms which grow in their neighbor- hood, restrict themselves to certain kinds which they know to be edible and in cases of doubt should abstain altogether. --- Twist Drill Gauge We illustrate herewith a new twist drill gauge, the opposite sides being shown in Figs. 1 and 2, manufactured by T. F. Welch & Co., 65 Sudbury street Boston, Mass. The tool is made of cast steel, hardened. The holes, it is stated, are gauged accuratey, and the principal improvement embodied in this tool that it combines a drill gauge with the tap [illustration, Fig. 1--Twist Drill Gauge] [illustration, verso of above, no caption] drill sizes. This is accomplished by indi- cating on the reverse side the tap drill sizes by means of numbers. It is claimed that this is a great advantage over the old [folded paper in image is unreadable at fold but full text is transcribed from original ] method of guessing the sizes required by the different taps. The point is made that the toold is well made and finished and sold at a moderate price. --- [right column] 335 [the back of the first part of this clipping was mistakenly photographed for digitization. the front of the clipping has text as follows to the clipping break ---] CIRCUIT-BREAKER Automatic Arrangement for Shutting off Lights in Windows, Etc. An invention of more than ordinary in- terest is an automatic circuit breaker which shuts off window lights, display lights, etc., at any time desired, and then does away with the necessity of having a man go and shut them off by hand. The mechanical parts are attached to a swiitch- board, the connecting electric wires pass- ing through two holes in about the centre --- of the board, one of the wires supplying the electricity from an outside source and the other furnishing it to the lights. The ends of the wires are attached to two spring plates about a foot apart, a pivoted conductive bar joining the two plates. To normally hold this connecting bar in posi- tion to close the circuit is a pivoted catch, this catch being suspended on wire rods connecting with the mechanism of an alarm clock. A second conductive bar is placed beneath the upper one and at- tached in the same way, the two being [illustration of device] connected by a bar. The alarm clock is set for the hour at which the lights are to be extinguished. When the alarm is set in motion it pulls the rods connected with the catch up far enough to release the conductive bars. A strong spring then acts to draw one end of the bars away from the spring plates, breaking the cir- cuit and shutting off the lights. --- DEEPEST HOLE IN EARTH Men of science are interested in all very deep borings in the earth on ac- count of the opportunity which they offer for experiments on the internal temperature of the globe. Gas and oil wells sometimes attain a great depth and after they have ceas- ed to be useful in other ways are turned to scientific account. The very deepest hole that mand has yet succeeded in making in the earth is said to be near Rybnik in Silesia where the boring through strata of coal and rock has reached a depth of about 6770 feet. The deepest boring in this country is believed to be an oil well at Pittsburg, which has reach- ed a depth of 5,740 feet, but is to be bored much deeper for the sake of the information it may furnish to science.
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