pOUpTll^^ V » * DROPPING BOARD. Arrangement made Which Makes a Lighter an: 1 Cheaper Affair. Instead of a solid platform, or "drop ping board," beneath the roosts, use two fairly wide boards in front of and behind the roost, as shown in the cut. % / \ r / ' i i i ' x The Dropping Board. They will catch practically all the droppings, and each board can bo car ried out and emptied when desired; or a basket can be placed on the floor directly beneath the opening between the boards, and with a hoe the drop pings on ono board can be shoved off into the basket and pulled forward into the other. Having two boards, and these loose, remarks Farm Jour nal. niak' -j «t < ■ "jior to gun I againt.l vet mill. GOOD POULTRYMEN. Some of the Ways in Which They May Be Known. It is never difficult to judge a poul try man by the conditions which exist around the yard anil houses. A good poultrynjan will keep every thing neat and clean and provide warm, and comfortable houses, with nice scratching sheds. He will keep only pure breeds, and these ho will select carefully and cull out all poor specimens. He will feed carefully a variety of foods —never too much or too little — and will at all times see that mites do not get. any headway in the houses. He will provide a separate house for the pullets and will never allow them to roost in trees or on fences. All in all, everything will tell at a glance that he is the man who will make a success. HEN POINTERS. It will pay to own a root cutter. Trap nests expose the fraudulent hens. Fatty meat should never be fed lay ing stock. Never undertake more than you can easily do well. No positively fresh-egg supply needs togo a-begging. Indifferent care will ruin the capa city of and breed. Indian Runners are small ducks and prolific layers. The steady layer is of more value than the phenomenal one. "Good condition" is measured by both weight and health. Have an object in view, and then "work strictly to the line." To market an ailing fowl is, or should be, considered a crime.—Farm Journal. An illy ventilated poultry house is an abomination in cold weather when the house must he closed to keep out the cold. It is better to let the house be cold than damp, but if well ventilated there is no need of it being either damp or cold. The drinking water for the fowls should have the chill taken off of it before they can be expected to par take of it freely. They will never lay eggs in abundance if they must drink ice cold water—Journal of Agriculture. The Need of Grit. I believe many chicks die during the summer because they do not get enough grit, declares a writer in Farm and Home. The past summer my sup ply of grit, ran out and an unusual number of chicks died of botvel trouble. As soon as .* began to feed grit again not nearly so many died. I make my own grit. I secured a supply of limestone and crushed it.to the desired fineness and it gave excel lent results. I am a great believer in charcoal for chieKs, and, indeed, older birds are all the better for having free access to it. During the past, summer I liave had excellent results from using only dry feed. Eggs Exported. Although the hens of the United States do not produce anything like so many eggs as our own people need, 59,000,000 were exported to Great Bri tain last year, says Farm Journal. Our British cousins consumed last year more than 17,000,000 pounds of poul try, a considerable portion of which was furnished by the United States. It is therefore plain that the poultry business is not. likely to be overdone in the United States very soon. Country Mud. Country mud may sometimes be a trifle too deep for comfort, but still it is good, clean soil; while the black ooze on the city streets is a com pound of coal dust and pneumonia, sweepings, brick dust and typhoid, be sides a hundred other filthy compo nents that cling to shoes and clothlag like wax. THE GULF COAST OF! TEXAS A LAND "FLOWING IN MILK AND HONEY." Semi-Tropical Climate; Vast Yields of Vegetables and Fruit. Corpus Christi, Tex., Feb. 12, The lower Uio Grande Valley is i sometimes erroneously referred to as ' I Southwest Texas, anil so is ElPaso, j but THEY ARE EIGHT HUNDRED JULES APART. It is Winter in Northern Texas while tho Gulf Coast country is enjoying I sunshine like that of May. In fact the Gulf Coast knows no Winter—every month is a growing , I month. Texas produces wheat like Minne sota, corn like Illinois, and more cot ton than any other two Southern i States combined. And no part of this | great State surpasses in opportunity | and possibilities the Gulf Coast Coun ' try and the region down by the Rio Grande. i Artesian water was discovered five j or six years ago on the great King ! Ranch, near Corpus Christi. As time j went on the Artesian Belt was extend ed until it now covers the territory | from Robstown, sixteen miles west of 1 Corpus Christi, to Raymondville, and is ! j being extended monthly with every in- j dication that, a satisfactory flow will be obtained in all territory not covered by the systems of irrigation on the Rio Grande. One ot the must successful plauUia j on tho Kio Grande is Mr. John Closncr, who owns six thousand acres near Hi dalgo, on the S. L., B. & M. Ry. From I thirty-three acres of Bermuda onions j Mr. Closner last year (1900) shipped ; thirty-five carloads of as fine onions | as were evar grown. This crop alone netted him $15,000. Two crops of corn can be grown on the same land each year along the Rio Grande. Rice, cotton and numer ous other crops, as well as a great variety of fruit can be grown just as successfully. At a dinner recently given some visitors, a Gulf Coast agri culturist set fifteen (15) different va rieties of vegetables before his guests. A comprehensive book of eighty | pages, profusely illustrated and fully descriptive of the Texas Gulf Coast i may be obtained by addressing John Sebastian, Passenger Traffic Manager, Room 1. La Salle St. Sta., Chicago, or j Room 1, Frisco Bldg., St. Louis. WORDS DERIVED FROM SPORTS. Pastimes the Indirect Means of En riching the Language. Sports and pastimes of bygone days —and even of the present time —have added much to the English language, i "Check," which is said to be "shak," a variation of "shah," has not only come into common speech, but has ! been the foundation of many other words. A philologist traces to it"the checker board." "the exchequer" and i "a checkered career." "A g<x>d move" ! is also probably from chess. "Stoon to" is from falconry. "Take the winiP out of her sails" is from yachting; so Is "on the wrong tack." "To jockey," "to show a clean pair of heels" are from horse racing. Fencing has been very fruitful as a source of new words. It gives "a hit.," "a palpable hit," to "parry a question," or "fence with it," "a home thrust," "a | counter," "to be off one's guard." : From pugilism comes "to toss up the sponge," or "to chuck it up." "Put your back into it" is a reminiscence of rowing. Cricket has given many phrases, of which perhaps "stumped," "I stumped him on that question," is the common ■ est. "Coming up to the scratch" i 3 1 probably derived from dueling. "Ay, there's the rub" is derived from bowls, though "a rub on the green" is | akin to it. Hostess' Trade Union. What is wanted is a hostess' trade union, a powerful combination of so | ciety women pledged to maintain their | own self-respect, and to extinguish : socially any man guilty of the slight- S est lapse of the courtesy which every ! woman has every right to expect. The drawback to the formation of such a j society lies in the fact that unfortu nately being respected neither by men nor by each other most women do not respect themselves either—Ladies' Field. GUIDES CHILDREN. Experience and a Mother's Love Make Advice Valuable. An Ills, mother writes about feeding children: "If mothers would use Grape-Nuts more for their little ones, there would be less need for medicines and fewer doctor bills. "If those suffering from indigestion and stomach troubles would live on Grape-Nuts, toast and good milk for a short period they would experience more than they otherwise would be lieve. "Our children have all learned to know the benefit of Grape-Nuts as an appetizing, strengthening food. It is every evening, with few variations, like this: 'Mamma, let's have toast and Grape-Nuts for breakfast; or, let's have eggs and Grape-Nuts'—never forget ting the latter. "One of our boys in school and 15 years of ago repeatedly tells me his mind is so much brighter after having Grape-Nuts as a part if not all liis breakfast." Name given by Postum Co., Battle Creek, Mich. Read the lit tl'> book, "The Road to Wellville," in pfcgs. "There's a Reason." CAMERON COUNTY PRESS, THURSDAY, FEBRUARY 21, 1907. WORKS IN THE GARDEN. j Eighty-Seven Years Old, But Hat a Sound Back. Robert Scollan, 87 yoars old, of 55 j Garden St., Seneca Fjlls, N. Y., a fine, sturdy old gentle man, who works EFT~ -» a in his own gar jSa don, gives thanks to Doan's Kidney \J Pills for his sound back kidneys. MrMft ' h ai j a severe at tack of kidney trouble and lumbago, ! which caused hint much suffering. He began taking Doan's Kidney Pills and was soon cured. We always keep them on hand. My husband was cured ; of bad pains in tho back by taking j only part of a box." Sold by all dealers. 50 cents a box. Foster-Mil burn Co., Buffalo, N. Y. Wonder of Plant Memory. Plant memory is a problem for the inquisitive botanist, says the Dundee ; Advertiser. In 1901 a plant allied to the squash and pumpkin was taken to New York from the desert of Sonora, l In Mexico, and since then it has been kept—without watering—in a strange ; climate 3,G00 miles from home. Dur ! log the six weeks of rain in the des ; ert the plant grows its leaves and flowers and perfects its seed. Then it dries up and leaves only a water filled gourd, which a thick, hard shell seals against animals and evaporation. | The transplanted specimen still re i members the rainy season of six J weeks. It wakes, sends out rootlets, | steir.c and leaves, an l then d**ie3 up i again until the following year. NO RELIEF FROM ECZEMA For Over Two Years—Patent Medi cines, Quack Cures, and Doctors Fail—Cuticura Succeeds. "I was very badly afflicted with ec zema for more than two years. The parts affected were my limbs below the knees. I tried all the physicians in the town and some in the surround ing towns, and I also tried all the pat ent remedies that I heard of, besides all the cures advised by old women and quacks, and found no relief what ever until 1 commenced using the Cu ticura Soap, Cuticura Ointment, and Cuticura Resolvent. In the Cuticura Remedies 1 found immediate relief, and was soon sound and well. C. V. Beltz, Tippecanoe, ind., Nov. 15, *05." Henry Clay and Lew Wallace. "Mr. Clay was of a personality once seen never to be forgotten. Tall, slender, graceful, he had besides the air majestic which kings affect, im agining it exclusive property. "Throughout Mr. Clay's performance my eyes scarcely left his countenance, which, as he proceeded, sank from sight until, by the familiar optical illusions, nothing of it remained but the mouth, and that kept enlarging j and widening until it seemed an elas- I tic link holding the ears together, j Indeed, at this late writing, my one | distinct recollection of the man and > his speech is the mouth and its capac ity for infinite distension."—Autobiog raphy of Lew Wallace. MIX THIS AT HOME. Valuable Prescription Which Anyone Can Easily Prepare. The following simple home-made mixture is said' to readily relieve and overcome any form of Rheumatism by forcing the Kidneys to filter from the blood and system all the uric acid and poisonous waste matter, relieving at once such symptoms as backache, weak kidneys and bladder and blood diseases. Try it, as it doesn't cost much to make, and is said to be absolutely harmless to the stomach. Get the following harmless ingredi ents from any good pharmacy: Fluid Extract Dandelion, one-half ounce; Compound Kargon, one ounce; Com pound Syrup of Sarsaparilla, three ounces. Mix by shaking well in a bot tle, and take a teaspoonful after each meal and again at bedtime. This simple mixture is said to give prompt relief, and there are very few cases of Rheumatism and Kidney troubles it will fail to cure perma nently. These are all harmless, every-day drugs, and your druggist should keep them in the prescription department; if not, have hint order them from the wholesale drug houses for you, rather than fail to use this, if you are af flicted. Professor Jones to l^tire. Prof. George W. Jones, head of the department of mathematics of Cornell university will retire at the end of the present year. The board of trus tees will ask the Carnegie endowment fund for a pension for him. Prof. Jones went to Cornell as the head of the department of mathematics in 1877 and has occupied that place ever since. He is one of the oldest men in point of service on the Cornell facul ty. He is the author of several treatises and textbooks. Handy. Young Poet (to creditor who pre sents a bill—Oh, how good of you: I was looking everywhere for a piece of paper upon which to write a won-, derful thought which has just come to me, and you drop down like an an gel from heaven! TO HIKE A OOI.U I \ <>> R I> A v Take LAXATIVE IIKOMO Quinine Tablets. Drui.'- I'istH refund money if it fans to cure 14 \v liItOVKS signature is on eacli box. 25c. Too bad that most good eating is bad for one. PUTNAM FADELESS DYES rotor more goods, per package, than others, and the colors arc brighter ami faster. Sometimes a woman's face overdoes it In the matter of telling her age. Mr*. Wlnrton'H Soothing Syrup. For children toetliltif, uuftena the gurus, reduces tfr uammtiMoa, allaya pain, cutch wlml colic, v&ca bottle. A tight man and a loose dog are equally dangerous. 1M1.F..M rt'BED ISI « TO 14 DATS.. I'AZO OINTSIKNT Is kiiu ran teed to cure .in* ense of It eh riK. Blind. HleiMlinu or Protruding filet* it) oto 14 days or money refunded. fiOo. While man wants but little here be low, he never gets quite enough. For a time, take Nature's medicine, Garfield Tea: it cleanses the system, pur ities the blood and insures a normal action of liver, kidneys, stomach and bowels. Made of Iterbs. A kind thought toward a fellow mor tal has but little virtue in it if it be not transmuted into a generous deed. —Rev. J. L. Spalding. It Cures While You Walk. Allen's Foot-Ease is a certain cure for hot, sweating, callous, and swollen, aching feet. Sold by all druggists. Price 25c. Don't accept any substitute. Trial package FREK. Address Allen S. Olmsted, Le Roy, N. Y. "VGMSte. A Man of High Principle. Scotsman up for the week end (who has been asked by his friend togo to a music hall.) —Na, na, man! D'ye no ken I never visit a music hall on th' Saturday—for fear I should laugh in th' kirk on th' Sawbath?—London Opinion. Great Merchant fcJom <>n Farm. Like many other monarchs of tra<i»>, William Whiteley, the London mer chant who was murdered recently, was born on a farm. It was his boast that he stood ready to fill any order, no matter how unprecedented. A story is told of two army officers who went into his great London store and one of them asked for six elephant*. They were forthcoming and the man who had bet they wouldn't be there paid, though it turned out that the winner had arranged with Whiteley in advance. THREE EPOCHS IN A WOMAN'S LIFE MRS. ELVA BARBER EDWARDS MRS. GEORGE WALTERS There are three critical stages in a woman's life which leave their mark in her career. The first of these stages is womanhood, or the change from a care free girl to budding womanhood, The second is motherhood, and the third is Change of Life. Perils surround each of these stages, and most of the misery that comes to women through ill health dates from one or another of these im portant crises. Women should remember that Lydia B. Plnkham's Vegetable Compound made from native roots and herbs lias carried thousands of young girls over the critical period of puberty, has prepared mothers for childbirth, and in later years carried them safely through the change of life more suc cessfully than any other remedy in the world. Thousands of testimonials from grateful persons, two of which are here published, substantiate this fact beyond contradiction, Mrs. George Walters of Woodlawn, 111. writes t Dear Mrs. Pinltham:— "I feel it my duty to toll you of the good Lydia E. Pinkliam's Vegetable Compound has done me in preparing for childbirth. After suffering and losing my children a friend advised mo to try your "valuabie me dicine, and the result was that I had very littlo inconvenience, a quick recovery and Daring its long record of more than thirty years its long list of actual cures, entitles Lydia E. Pinkliam's Vegetable Compound to the respect and confidence of every fair minded person. Lydia E. Pir kham's Vegetable Compound Makes Sick Women Wei!. Paint Your Floors I Nothing will lend more elegance and refinement to your home than nicely IHI painted floors. For your parlor, dining room and bed rooms a painted border surrounding a rug gives you floor perfection, sanitary conditions and all around satisfaction. The painted border sets off the rug and gives the room that finished appearance. Ihe rug can be easily taken up for airing and cleaning. Buffalo Floor Palnf 8 is specially made for painting floors; is made of the kind of materials that stand scrubbing with soap and water; is made to walk on, and holds its finish long after other so-called floor paints have been worn off. liuffalo Floor Paints are made in ditferent shades, and are easily and quickly applied. ¥ To every lady who has a floor to finish and who sends us the • name of her dealer, we will send our booklet of valuable inform- B ation on floor finishing, which will surely interest you, and our beautiful silvered I Souvenir Buffalo-Head Hat Pin Free. * | Buffalo Oil Paint & Varnish Co. Nrw Vork Nf Chicago, Illinois GALL-STONE CURE. "Craemer'sCalculus Cure" u> i. 77 „ la a Certain Remedy FOR GALL STONES, Htonejun the Kidneys. Stnnesin the Urinary ltlaildcr or U.-avel. llllioiifiness. Hallow Complexion. Jaundioe und all Stomach Troubles resulting rrora Hllloiisneis. Write for clrcnlHr. WAf. CUAKUEK, -ISfOO North Oranit Avenue, ST. LOl'lH, MO. PUTNAM FADELESS DYES •Ul°«. moro ?°°«.* anll *a»tcr colors than any other dye. One 10c package colors all liber*. They in cold water better than any other dye. You can dye U i Q»rment without rippma apart Write lot booklet-How to D»e, Bleach and Mix Coltr*. MONROE DRUG CO., Unlor vltt*, KllfvurA SICK HEADACHE ; 1 Positively enred by Q these Little Pills. ! liMIM Ll\o TUejr also relieve Dls ■h tress from Dyspepsia, Ia- digestion and Too Hearty * B\i 112 D Eating. A perfect rem 3gj IVKn 8\ edy for Dizziness, Nausea, m PILLS. I Drowsiness, Bad Tasto ' i ]■ In tha Mouth, Coated ~0, " • . Tongue, Pain In the Side, iTOKI'ID LIVER. They j regulate tho Bowels. Purely Vegetable. SMALL PILL SMALL DOSE, SMALL PRICE. PAOTCPcI Gsnuino Must Bear ■ITTLE Fac-Simile Signature fpRLS. I™*—l REFUSE SUBSTITUTES. A Positive CURE FOR Al#\ mmmMrng Eiy's Cream Balm | Is quickly absorbed. »>•* Gives Relief at Once. A It cleanses, soothes, j heal:) and protects the diseased membrane. It cures Catarrh aud drives away a Cold in the Head quickly. Restores the Senses of Taste and SmelL Full size .10 cts. at Druggists or by mail; j Trial size 10 cts. by mail. ' Ely Brothers, 56 Warren Street. New York. Th© namo itself describes all. Sen J for cai.i)oKuo free, vrbkb five:-. description of all onr fences and iron Kates. IWIGOINS WIRE FENCE CO.. ANDERSON, IMO. WHY put l° n 9i hard hours at small pay ■ wail on the farm or elsewhere when if you have a team and wagon and are willing to learn and apply yourself you can easily earn from $20.00 to $50.00 & e e !K selling our Stock A Poultry Preparations, Spices Kxtracts, Medicines. Write tor full particulars. THE W. T. RAWLEI6H 60. FREEPORT, ILL. Old Established, Rtliable Ons Million Dollars Capital CONCRETE (hollo*) BLOCK machine. cheapest. hj-pt; making .'<oo V r _ 'JSI water-nroof. bidldinsf blocks dally. , ifcinrlW FIIANCIS MACHINE CO., ST. Louia. as healthy a child as can bo found anywhere. Lydia E. Pinkham's Vegetable Compound is a blessing to all expectant mothers." Mrs, Elva Barber Edwards of Cathlamet, Wash., writes: Dear Mrs. Pinkham:— "I want to tell you how Lydia E. Pink ham's Vegetable Compound carried me through the critical period of the Change of Life without any trouble whatever, also cured me of a very severe female weakness, I cannot say enough in praise of what your medicine has done for mo." What Lydia E. Pinkham's Vegetable Compound did for Mrs. Walters and Mrs. Edwards it wi 11 do for other wo men in their condition. Every suf fering' woman in the United States is aslced to accept the following in- , vitation. It is free, will bring you health and may save your life, Mrs. Pinkham's Invitation to Women. Women suffering from any form of female weakness are invited to promptly communicate with Mrs. Pinkham, at Lynn, Mass. From the symptoms given, the trouble m:iy be located and the quickest and surest way of recovery advised. Out of her vast volume of experience in treating > female ills Mrs. Pinkham probably ' has the very knowledge that will help your case. Her advice is free and helpful. FROST j For winter irritations of the ' skin, eczemas, rashes, frost I bites, chappings, chafings, ] itchings, redness and rough ness, especially of face and hands, for lameness rnd soreness incidental to winter sports, for sanative, antisep tic cleansing,for baby rashes, itchings, and chafings, and j for all the purposes of the ; toilet,bath,and nursery,Cuti cura Soap, assisted by Cuti cura Ointment, is priceless. Guaranteed absolutely pure, and may be used from the hour of birth. Sold throughout the world. Depot*: London. 27 Charterhouse So.; Paris. fi Hue de la Paix; Austra lia. K. Towns & Co., Sydney; India, B. K Paul, Caleutta; China, Kong Drue (*>.: Japan, Maruya. Lld.,Toklo: Ku.*wla, Ferreln, Moscow; .South Africa. Lennon, Ltd., Cape Town, etc.; U. S. A.» Potter Druir A Chcm. Corp., Sole Props., Boston. MTPostrtree, Cuticura Booklet. 4b page*. Fertile Farming LANDS Cheap Easy Terms In the Best Section of the South Unexcelled for General Farming. Stock Raising, Berries, Fruit and Vegetables. Cantaloupes, Strawberries, Peaches, Apples, C;rapes, etc., give handsome returns. Cattle need but little winter feed. HEALTHY CLIMATE. GOOD WATER. LONG GROWING SEASON. Address G. A. PARK, Gen. Im. & Ind'l Agt. Louisville & Nashville R. R. Co. LOUISVILLE, KY. NEW WHEAT LANDS IN THE CANADIAN WEST ??nnPsPf9HPr«9ft I R flfin additional miles of rullwa y r* I vear have opened n> a I largely increased teiri ■PjiC j tory to the progressive farmers of Western W Canada and the C.ov- G f rnment l^e Domiii- ONK HUNDRED AND SIXTY ACRES I'RKE to every settler. THE COUNTRY HAS NO SUPERIOR Coal, wood nnd water in abundance; ehurcheo and school* convenient; markets easy of access; taxes low : climate the best in the northern tem perate zone. Law and order prevails everywhere. For ndvice and information address the SUPERINTENDENT OF IMMIGRATION* Ottawa. Canada, or any authorized Canadian Government A nent. H. M. WILLIAMS, Law Building, Toledo, Ohio. LEARN TELEGRAPHY R. R. Agency Work and Type-writing System of Telepranh Schools In America. Kndorsed l»y Railroad «>fli«'ials. Operators n|wav4 in demand. We serine positions for our to actuates. Mudents can enter any ti me. MAIN LINE RAILROAD WIRE IN SCHOOL Write for free illustrated catalogue, term*, ete. THE MORSE SCHOOL OF TELEGRAPHY COMPARE «1 United Bank Bldg., CINCINNATI, OHIO. ——————i ii PATENTS Gte Protection 1 II FOI* 17 YE ARS. AT LITTLE COST X ( I Send for free booklet. MlloH. Stevens A Co.. w ■ I ) 900 nth St.. Washington. I). C. branches m ( ) at < 'hi capo. Cleveland and Detroit. Fstab. X' I , lfcGt. So patent, uo fee for our services. X ' i——————————, (SEAFLANDS ' etc ; convenient to the very best markets and transi*oi' tition facilitip* Write nearest oftbe for list* and imilm lleat lons. At. V. Uleharjls. and Industrial A pent, Southern Hv. and Mohlle * Ohio K. I( . Washington. 1). C. U. S. Chase. West. Agt. 224 Chemical Bldp, St. Louis, Mo. GREGORY'S CCCRC are the kln<l you run <le- OECU w I" ndon. Catalogue ,1 J.H. GICCUT S Son, MAFBLCHEAB. ILISI.^WF II^ A. N. K.—C (1907—7) 2165. 3
Significant historical Pennsylvania newspapers