C2]> FOR A HORSE HARD TO CATCH. Fasten Short Bit of Chain to His Fore Leg Above Knee. For a horse that is hard to catch, take a chain about one and one-half feet long, and fasten it with a strap to his front leg, just above the knee. L\ Breaking a Hard Runner. The chain will hang down and will not bother the horse while he walks, but if he runs, it strikes hi 3 other leg, and he will be forced to stop. They don't run far before they stop mid let you catch them. SPECIALIZING IN STOCK. Farmers Should Follow Lines In Which They Will Have Best Success. This is fast becoming an age of spe cializing. The farm of a few years ago was supposed to produce about all that was consumed. A great many things were made then, too, that are bought now. The change has been coming on gradually, but now the dis position is general to let the man who Is better fitted for doing or producing one thing follow his line, while we may follow another line, and the ex change is made through the regular channels of trade. The stockmen are taking up spe cializing to a wonderful extent. A very few years ago the stockman had a few of all classes of stock, and each class represented some of all ages. To-day, we find more and more of the special herds. The cattleman sticks to a certain line, and if lie raises for the market he likes to have the bunch all of an age and size. It is the same with every other line of livestock. After all that has been said of having a few of all kinds, then you will be sure of having some of the right kind, for stock does better to run all of an age and size, and is easier cared for. A FEW HOG DON'TS. Do the Don'ts If You Would Have Success in Raising Pigs. Don't kepp diseased hogs with the rest of the herd. Most diseases com mon to hogs are contagious, especial ly cholera. Don't let your feed lot get foul. A hog as well as other animals does bet ter when he has a clean eating and sleeping place. Don't expect to raise thrifty pigs by feeding the sows nothing but corn. Plenty of slops are essential to the growth of the pigs. Don't let your sows and pigs sleep at old straw ricks unless you want them to die with the cholera or some other disease. Don't let your shoats run all over the farm. A few dollars spent in wire will save you much worry and keep your meadows and growing crops from injury. Don't let your pigs root up the meadows and pastures. A few hog rings are cheaper than a lot of tim othy and blue grass which would bo destroyed. Don't let your sows run together until farrowing time. Cold nights they will pile up together and may cause the loss of their pigs. It is best to separato them a month before. Don't fail to give your hogs plenty of ashes and salt. If you iave an old ash bank about the place, throw it into the pen and salt it good. The hogs will dispose of it to their ad vantage. Don't keep a chicken-eating sow just because she raises large litters of pigs, says Farmers' Voice. She will soon eat her worth in chickens. Put her in the fattening pen and let her goon the market as soon as possi ble. STOCK NOTES. A badly-shod horse is one that will perform his work with difficulty. The cow is a machine for convert ing food into, milk, and the profits from her work are in proportion to her digestive and assimilative powers. With an increasing demand for horses on the farms where they are raised there will be less horses to sell and consequently those sold will com mand a higher price. Keep on raising good draft colts. The future brood sow should show every indication of being able to prop- Brly nourish her litter. This quality is evidenced by the development of ten or twelve well-formed teats. This is ipiite an important point. Beforo building the barn or hog house sit down and calculate where it can be placed, and how planned to be the most convenient. The average farmer shortens his life a fourth by taking unnecessary steps around the baru and feed lots. FATTENING HOGS. Make Selections Early and Push the Feeding as Rapidly as Possible. Tho fatteninE of hogs begins at the time you decide which will be the ones to go. If they are well started from birth, with plenty of feed neces sary for the development of bone and muscle building, then tho fattening process may be reserved until the last eight weeks before selling. After weaning they should be allowed milk with middlings, and if confined, a cut ting of germ clover or alfalfa while it may be had. One of the family who lives near a brewery has found that warm separated milk mixed with malt is an excellent feed for the pigs dur ing the growing season, and no grain is necessary until ready to finish for the market. With me, milk and mid dlings and occasionally a little bran mixed with green alfalfa has formed the ration. I keep salt and ashes before them, as well as a box of charcoal. During the winter when no green food is to be had, says a writer in Orange Judd Farmer, 1 feed once a day some silage, just what they will eat up clean, and they seem to relish it very much. The value of alfalfa hay with the corn feed the last six weeks is not fully known, yet it will cause a gain of one and one-half pounds a day, which is more than any other ration I have ever known. The Nebraska ex periment station has made soiao very interesting experiments along this line, with remarkable results, and de clares in favor of alfalfa hay with corn as the most economical and profitable. Of course, I have no other hay, but know the hogs eat is greedily, either dry or green, and it keeps them in perfect condition. SHEEP IN THE ORCHARD. One Farmer Who Thinks They Give Him Good Crops of Apples. "I think one great reason why my orchard has done so well is because I have let my sheep run in it a good deal." The old man that said this always has the best fruit and the most of it of any man in bis neighborhood. Many years when his neighbors would al most fail of having any fruit, his or chard would have a plentiful supply. Take it this year, for example. Throughout the entire county there is a marked scarcity of apples. But this man's trees are well loaded. Ha will have a little fortune from his fruit. There is a great deal of sense in his belief that the. sheep have done his orchard good, writes E. L. Vincent, in Farmers' Iteview. All through the spring and fall after the apples are out of the way, he pastures the sheep in the orchard. They pick up any small or wormy fruit that, may have been left on the ground. They leave the richest kind of manure all over the earth. They keep the weeds down and altogether cultivate the orchard as it could not otherwise be. We fail, fellow farmers, by not giv ing our orchards better treatment. They are starving. Take many or chards and you will see great patches of moss on the ground. The branches are many of them dead or dying. The earth is covered with grass or weeds that provide the best possible harbor for enemies of the trees. How can we expect to get much fruit? Tho wonder is that we get as much as we do. Sheep like to run under trees. Tho orchard is almost the ideal place for them. FOUR HORSES ABREAST. Arrangement of Lines Which Is Sim ple and Effective. The diagram illustrates the way a writer in Breeders' Gazette hooks up bis four horses abreast. AAAA are two-horse reins and Diagram of Lines. checks. BB are short ropes with snaps. CC are bridle reins unbuckled on inside of bridle with snap to snap in check buckle on reins. Hints for the Shepherd. Sheep will build up any farm. Give them plenty of pure water and never permit them to eat snow instead. Keep the troughs clean. Keep salt before them at all times. Trim tho feet spring and fall. Shelter from cold storms; you cannot starve a profit out of a flock. Muddy yards cause sore feet. Feed at a regular time. Pigs with Cough. It is not generally known that pigs are afflicted with a spasmodic cough which greatly resembles whooping cough in children. This trouble usual ly runs its course in a few weeks. A little pine tar placed well down the throat or a teaspoonful of tincture of asafoetlda given in a little milk will assist in relieving the trouble. CAMERGN COUNTY PRESS, THURSDAY, NOVEMBER 14, *907. TESTED BY TIME. A Cure That Has Held Good for Four Years. Mrs. Mary Crumlish of 1130 West Third Street, Wilmington, Del., says: §"Some years ago I began to feel weak and miserable and one day awoke from a nap with a pierc ing pain in my back that made me scream. For two days I could not move and after that Hlwvff ' 1 I had backache and dizzy spells all the time. My ankles swelled and Iran down dreadfully. I was nervous and had awful headaches. I wonder that any medicine could do what Doan's Kidney Pills have done for me. They cured me four years ago and I have been well ever since." Sold by all dealers. 50 cents a box. Foster-Milburn Co., Buffalo. N. Y. The Bright Firstborn. They were discussing the law of en tail —the English law bequeathing tho bulk of the family property to the eldest son. "There is 50 per cent, of logic in that law," said a physician, "and if the family property went to the firstborn, whether son or daughter, the law would contain 100 per cent, of logic. For the first born child in practically always thebest —best in brain, in build, in beauty, in everything. "Why is this so? It is because mar ried people love one another more pro foundly at the beginning than after ward; for love, like all thing 3, grows old, grows weak, often dies. "Mrs. Craigie—John Oliver Hobbes —was a first born child. So was Marie Corelli. So was Richard Mansfield. So were Joseph Chamberlain, Lord Kitchener, Max Muller, Henry Irving, George Meredith. "Look back into the past, and we see again the prominence of the first born, among them Mohammed, Con fucius, Raphael, Milton, Dante, Goethe, Byron, Shelly and Heine." Mansfield's Rebuke. A group of theatrical men were talk ing in New York about the late Rich ard Mansfield. "Mr. Mansfield," said one, was a de lightful liumoroist, a splendid racon teur in society, but at the same time he had a certain proper and becoming sense of his own dignity, and it never paid to be unduly familiar with him. "He was, as wo all know, rather bald. He resented, from barbers, or friends, any allusion to his baldness. "Well, one night at a party, a man came up behind this great artist, stag gered him with a violent slap on the back, and exclaimed in a loud, jovial, familiar voice: "'llello, Dick. How are you? Every time I see you, you get balder and balder.' Mansfield drew himself up. Ho aneered at the other. " 'Hello,' he said. 'I don't know who you are, but every time I see you you get ruder and ruder.' " Too Many Islands. Larry—Me friend Casey has made a lot av money awn gone to spind th' summer in th' Thousand islands. He invited me up. Denny—Faith, phoy don't yez go? Larry—Bedad, he didn't say which island awn Oi might have to hunt over noine hundred and nointy-noine be fore Oi found him. By thot time ma vacation would be over. Seems Probable. "Ma, didn't the heathens have a god for everything?" "Yes, my child.' "Well, who was the god who ruled over kitchens?" "I don't just remember; but I think it was the great god Pan." Many think they can overcome sin by shooting glittering generalities at the devil. HER "BEST FRIEND." A Woman Thus Speaks of Postum. We usually consider our best friends those who treat us best. Some persons think coffee a real friend, but watch it carefully awhile and observe that it is one of the meanest of all enemies for it stabs one while professing friendship. Coffee contains a poisonous drug— caffeine —which injures the delicate nervous system and frequently sets up disease in one or more organs of tho body, if its use is persisted in. "I had heart palpitation and nerv ousness for four years and the doctor told me the trouble was caused by coffee. He advised me to leave it off, but I thought I could not," writes a Wis. lady. "On the advice of a friend I tried Postum Food Coffee and it so satis fied me that I did not care for coffee after a few days' trial of Postum. "As weeks went by and I continued to use Postum my weight increased from 98 to 118 pounds, and the heart trouble left me. I have used it a year now, and am stronger than I ever was. I can hustle up stairs without any heart palpitation, and I am cured of nervousness. "My children are very fond of Post um and it agrees with them. My sis ter liked it when she drank it at my house, but not when she made it at her own home. Now she has learned to make it right, boil it according to directions, and has become very fond of it. You may use my name if you wish, as I am not ashamed of praising my best friend—Postum." Name given by Postum Co., Battle Creek, Mich. Read "The Road to Wellvlll?," in pkgs. "There's a Rea son." JUST WHAT HE WANTED. Surely Here Were Musical Tastes Enough to Suit Anybody. A gentleman of the most cultivated musical tastes, wishing to change his residence, advertised for rooms in a private family "fond of music." The next mail brought him the follow ing reply: "Dear Sir: I think we could accom modate you with rooms, and as for music one of my daughters plays the parlor organ and gittar; another one plays the accordeon and banjo; I play tho cornet and fiddle; by wife plays the harmonica and my son the flute. We all sing and if you are good at tenner singing you would fit right in when owe get to singing gospel hims evenings, for none of us sings tenner. Or if you plays the base vial we have one right here in the house. If you want music as well as rooms and board we could accommodate you and there would be no extra charge for it. Lippincott's. FAMILY'S SKIN TROUBLES. Eczema, Heat Rash, and Scalp Affec tions Afflict Different Members, But Cuticura Cure 6 Them. "My wife had eczema for five or six years, it was on her face and would come and go. We thought we would give the Cuticura Remedies a trial. We did so and she has never had a sign of eczema for four years. I myself used Cuticura Soap and Cuticura Ointment come time ago for falling hair. I now have a very heavy head of hair. Wo used Cuticura Remedies for our baby, who was nearly bald when young. She has very nice hair now. She is very fleshy, and we had so much trouble with heat that we would bathe her with Cuticura Soap and then apply Cuticura Ointment, it would dry the heat up so much quicker than any thing else. Mr. H. B. Springmire, 323 So. Capital Street, lowa City, la., July 16, 1905, and Sept. 16, 1906." Taken At His Word. Master Walter, aged 5, had eaten the soft portions of his toast at break fast, and piled the crust on his plate. "When I was a little boy," remarked his father, who sat opposite him, "I always ate the crusts of my toast." "Did you like them?" inquired his offspring, cheerfully. "Yes," replied the parent. "You may have those," said Mas ter Walter, pushing liis plate across the table. —Harpers' Weekly. Much the Same. His Wife —I see by the paper that at a wedding in Oklahoma last week the man promised to obey instead of the woman. I wonder how the mar riage will turn out? Her Husband—Oil, about like any other marriage, I suppose. He prob ably didn't mean it any more than a woman does when she says it. —Chi- cago Daily News. Important to Mothers. Examine carefully every bottle of CASTORIA a safe and sure remedy for infants and children, and see that it In Use For Over ;{() Years. The Kind You Have Always BoughL Knew What Was Coming. Wife—Well, I declare. Here's an old school friend of mine who has just made a fortune. Husband —All right, my dear. Go ahead. Tell me that you might have married him. .i *: *, , r?:jk- ~l I KIDNEY TROUBLES The kidneys are essential organs I )\ VviLj 3 for keeping the body free from im- /jt" (vriV/' J purities. 1 112 they should fail to work )\\ Fl I deatli would ensue in very short time. 3 Inilanimatioii or irritation caused 'v \\\j\ Iby some feminine derangement may .« |V \V * I spread to some extent to the Kidneys \vAf | aud affect them, The cause can be U\ \\ so far removed by using Lj'dia E. Awo|Mj> j^l Pinkham's Vegetable Compound Yv \\ \. mfflSl that the trouble will disappear. ||\ cA\ \ MSI JL ■ When a woman is troubled with U J\\ \ \ /fimy/ yr I pain or weight in loins, backache, J \jdwjßly /*—\ I swelling of the limbs or feet, swell- \ SB ing under the eyes, an uneasy, tired ■ feeling in the region of tlie kidneys, — she should lose no time in com- MISS KATE A. HEARN mencing treatment with Lydia E. Pinkham'sVegetable Compound It may be the means of saving her life. Read what this medicine did for Kate A. liearn, 520 West 47th Street, New York, who writes:— Dear Mrs. Pinkbam: —"I owe a debt of gratitude to Lydia E. Pink ham's Vegetable Compound for it lias saved my life. I suffered with Kidney trouble, irregularities and painful periods, and my blood was ■ Ifast turning to water. I used your medicine for some time and it has m made me strong and well." Lydia E. Pinkham's Vegetable Compound made from native roots H and herbs cures Female Complaints, such as Falling and Displacements, ■ and Organic Diseases. Dissolves and expels Tumors at an early stage. I It strengthens and tones the Stomach. Cures Headache, General Debility I and invigorates the whole system. For derangement of the Kidneys in H either sex Lydia E. Pinkham's Vegetable Compound is excellent. Mrs. Pinkham's Invitation to Women Women suffering from any form of female illness are invited to write H Mrs. Pinltham, at Lynn, Mass., for advice. It is free. W. L DOUGLAS A $3.00 & $3.5Q SHOES TSIMId JHk Ifay*SHOES FOR EVERY MEMBER OF -u THE FAMILY. AT ALL PRICES. y ' a » 459 C ftifilfi ( To anjr ano who can prove W.L. */? i'-'SA, Soouffimm doe* not mat re & sell JW VWT^. )more ««»'•s3 £ 93.80 shorn* nCWrff U (than any ether manufacturer. T I IK KF.AS< )N W. 1.. Douglas shoes are worn bymoro people i* "* IvA9»3» In all walks of life than any other make, la because of their \ i*3Hjr excellent style, easy-fitting, and superior wearing qualities. U'he selection of the leathers ami other materials for each parfc - S nfyßff of tho shoe, and every detail of the making is looked after by the most eompletenrganiautfon of superintendents,foreraonand skilled shoemakers, who rcceivo the highest wages paid in the *KL»i-"V J w shoe industry, and whose workmanship cannot be excelled. jjRBQB'AW If I could take you into my largo factories at Brookton.Mass., _• yßfv'W and show you how carefully W. 1,. Douglas shoes are made, you ffl .nU-f would then understand why they hold their shape, fit better, my J' wear longeT and are of greater valuo than any other malte. * B ' ao ®"' Shoes cannot be equalled at any price. CAUTION. Jno genuine liave \V . Ij. Douglas name and price stamped on bottom. Take rio Substitute. Ask your dealer for W. L. Douglas shoes. If he cannot supply you, send OiT»ct to factory. Sboexont everywhere bj mall. Catalog free. W.L-Dori*!*!, Brorl'io M*M» j Model for Rest of the Force. While Oil City cannot, perhaps, boast of being a strictly cold-water town, she can, we believe, lay claim to having among her residents tho champion temperance man of the state, if not of the entire country. Not only has he never drank any kind of splrltous or malt liquors, but he has never allowed any tea, coffee, soup or any kind of milk to pass his lips since he was a child. He is a colored man, was born in slavery, and because his father frequently drank more whisky than was good for him, he re solved when a boy to never drink any thing but water. And he has reli giously kept the resolution. He is a member of the Oil City police force, and his name is Major Franklin.— Oil City (Pa.) Blizzard. What He Learned. Proud Father —Welcome back to the old farm, my boy. So you got through college all right? Farmer's Son —Yes, father. P. F.—Ye know, I told ye to study up chemistry and things, so you'd know best what to do with different kinds of land. What do you think of that flat medder there, for instance? F. S.—Cracky, what a place for a ball game! Finance. "Sammy," said a Germantown moth er recently to her youngest-born, "When you divided those seven pieces of candy with your brother did you give him four?" "No, ma'am," replied Sammy, "I knew they wouldn't come out even, so I ate one before I began to di vide." —Harper's Weekly. There is no harmony in any song in which the heart does not sing. "OUCH, OH MY BACK" NEURALGIA, STITCHES, LAMENESS. CRAMP TWINGES. TWITCHES FROM WET OR DAMP ALL BRUISES, SPRAINS, A WRENCH OR TWIST THIS SOVEREIGN REMEDY THEY CAN'T RESIST PRICE 25C AND 50C THE MEN M 0 KNOW THE SUPERIOR , QUALITIES OE \ * jnffoi >1 'OfcjjKSwaN f 'SH BRM® \' j < SLICKERS. SUITS MpU AND HATS AhV & are the men who have j , put them to the hard- I est tests in the rough est weather. Get the original Tower's Fish Brand made since 1836 H CATALOG r/tCC FOR TMC ASrt/NQ A J TOWER CO BOSTOM. USA TO»t« C«>»Q|«N CO H-.TBP. TORONTO CAN DEFIANCE STARCH tlio puckaga -ottli-r Rtan hi'fl only 12 ounce*—sniro prlco ftnd "DEFIANCE" IS SUPERIOR QUALITY. A. N. K.—C (1907—45) • 2203. eima Cleanses the System Effect ually; Dispe Is Colas and lieact aches duo to Constipation; Acts naturally, acts truly as 0 Ijoxative. Best jot •Men\\£)men an ■icm. Ron -young and our. lo get its Beneficial Effects Always buv tKe Genuine vvkich has Tne jiul name of the Com pany CALIFORNIA po Strup Co. by whom it ii manufactured, printed on front of every package. SOLD BY ALL LEADING DRUGGISTS. one size onjy, regular price s(Kper bottle. XXIOIC'tS CAPUDINE removes the causn. Ijljl soothes the nerves and relieves the aches and COLDS AND GRIPPE £"3 headaches and neuralgia also. No bad effects. 10c. 2Sc and £oc bottles. CLiQCio.) 03 Sales agents In «ver» IT M LL I BLL county to SELL our cereal product. Agents can mako St toSH per day. Write, statin# territory wanted. TUB CKRBNA MILLS, Chicago, ILlinolfc n W TCUTO Wation K. Colcna., Patent Atto S'fl* B rll 1 3k nay, Waahington, D. G. Advica 1 9% I bIV I W free, 'lormalow. Highest rat. New and Liberal Homestead Reg'ulations in Y/E&TERN ' CANADA New Districts Now Opened for Settlement Some of the choicest lands in the grain grow kJ fl * ne e ' ts °* Saskatche- J I kJLP'jf & |» wan and Alberta hav# E recently been opened JriMV - i fllfV4 for settlement under the Revised Homestead of Canada. A3&Wtl Thousands of home steads of 160 acres each are now available. The new regulations make it possible for entry to be made by proxy, the oppor tunity that many in the United States have been waiting for. Any member of a family may make entry for any other member of the family, who may be entitled to make entry for himself or herself. Entry may now be made before the Agent or Sub- Agent of the District by proxy, (on certain condi tions) by the father, mother, sen. daughter, brothel or sister of intending homesteader. "Any even numbered section of Dominion Lands In Manitoba or the North-Went Provinces, excepting 8 and 20, not reserved, may be homo steaded by any person the sole head of a family, or male over IXyears of ape, to the extent of ono quarter section, of ICO acres, more or less." The fee in each case will be SIO.OO. Churches, schools and markets convenient. Healthy climate, splendid crops and good laws. Grain-growing and cattle raising principal industries. For further particulars as to rates, routes, bci lime togo and where to locate, apply to H. M. WILLIAMS, Law Building, Toledo, Ohio* send her Absolutely *free a largo Trial box of Paxtine with book of instruc tions and genuine testimonials. Send your name and address on a postal card. DA¥TlklC><>'"~ rMTINE»r»; lections, sucli as nasal catarrh, pelvic catarrh and inflammation caused DV leml nino Ills; soro eyes, soro throat and moutb, by direct local treatment Its cur ativt? power over.tlicso troubles is extra ordinary and Rives lmmediato relief. Thousands of women are using and rec ommending it every day. CO cents at druggists or by mail. Remember, however, IT COSTS YOI* NOTHING TO TRY IT. THE It. I'AXXON CO., lioaton, Mask ders with full jdxty twttlea l'aln J'alnt stops pain Instantly; removes Headaoha, Toothache, Jfeuralpia, in one minute; cools fattier than Ice; bums will not blister. A spoonful taken four times a day kills Dyspepsia. Sold 40 rears by agents. EC. 1.. WOLt'OTT, IVolrott Building, New \«rk. Cylinder Pressman = Wanted = WANTED: —A first-class cyl inder Pressman. State whether union or non-union. Address Lock Box 743 CHICAGO, ILL. S3OAN HOUR SB MERRY GO ROUNDS Wo nlso manufacture Razzl*-Dazzles. Strikers, eta. HKRHCII ELL-81M LLMAN CO..UoneralAmusement Outfitters. l.)opt. M. NORTH TONOWANDA. N. PATENTS™*™*** MARKS ol>- ■ ' m ' aV m ** taiuetl. d« lended and prosecuted bj AM.XANDEK