CONVENIENT MILKING STOOL. Another Type Which Combines Com fort and Utility. Take a board, a, 20 inches long and ten inches wide and to this nail two > boards, b b, 10x6 b Inches to serve as -i f—-- C -..IL' legs, so the ends are 1 a^ou ' * our inches below the board, a. Nail on the eeat and the board, c, which forms the front. Nail on a board, e, 3xlo Inches under d, to servo as a handle. Round oft tho corners of a, ex plains Farm and Home, and nail on around the edge a strip of barrel hoop BO that it projects about one-half inch above to hold the pail from sliding off. Under a nail a triangular board to eerve as a third leg. WATERING COWS. Care In the Quality of Water Provided Is Important. Tho bent arrangements for th« watering of dairy cows I consider t® be Individual basins between the cows In the winter timo and running water In the summer time. In the winter, fcays the writer in Farmers' Review, I water my cows out of doors, but that Is because I do as I have to do and not as I want to do. Most of the farmers about here water their cows out of doors. Where water Is supplied at all In the barns, the force that drives tho water comes from tanks of windmill or from hydraulic rams. The troughs of cement seen in some barns, and which run in front of all the cows, I believe to be all right, but I prefer the individual basins. Most of the cows about here get their water at the temperature it hap pens to be when It comes from the well, but in the winter time it would pay to warm it. lam satisfied that a cow that is given water with tho chill taken off will drink more of It and will consequently give more milk than she otherwise would. DAIRY NOTES. The growing stock Is carrying your pocketbook. It's intelligence, not luck, that counts in the dairy. The cow with the small udder and the big appetite seldom pays. It's the happy and contented cow that makes the farmer happy and con tented. The more we know about the cow, the more probable will be our success in handling her. Linseed meal and bran are two im portant elements in the ration. They are expensive but they pay. The manure pile on the dairy farm may not represent half the profits, but It is too valuable to be ignored. Beans for Green Manure. We know of one farmer that planted beans too early, and the late frost caught them, killing the whole crop. He planted again, but this time so thick that the pods did not form till an early fall frost caught them, and so the whole crop was lost. But the growth of the beans had been a very rank one, and the weeds had been kept from growing. Tho mass of lank herbage was plowed under and the land left to be planted the rfext year. The plowed-under beans proved to be great enrichers of the soil, for they added to it a very large quantity of nitrogen, In addition to the humus. This in its decay created acids which set loose more plant food in the soil. So the bean crop was not a total loss, alter all. Cooling the Milk. A speaker at a Wisconsin institute Bald: The main thing is to cool the milk quickly to a temperature of GO degrees or less, and it would pay the dairyman to provide ice for this pur pose. In the absence of ice an abundance of well water will enable the patron to quickly cool the milk to a temper ature of 50 degrees or below. If the cans are placed in cold water and tho milk is stirred until cooled to the tem perature of the water, which is usually about 50 degrees, well and good; but the average milker, after performing a long day's work In the field and then another half day's work, called for variety's sake chores, will not stand over the milk long enough to accom plish this The Dairy House. _ A good large well or dairy house Is very necessary to the equipment of a first-class dairy, but its use should be confined to the uses of the dairy. Its conversion into a sort of a store room or receptacle for vegetables, tools, worn out harnesses, etc., does not tend to produce a fine flavored milk or stim ulate the dairy appetite of the oc casional visitor. Kerosene Emulsion. One-half pound soap, one gallon wa ter, two gallons kerosene. Dissolve the soap In water ov«* flre, Remove #rom flre and add kerosene. Stir vio lently. Use one part of emulsion to 15 parts water. Burn the Rubbish. Old rubbish is more valuable In the form of ashes to tho gardener than any other way. Wood ashes make ex callent garden fertilizer If applied properly. SPRING KIDNEY TROUBLE. /Ivldly Described by On# Who H«a Suffered f/oni It. Mrs. H. Mutzabaugh, of Duncannon, Pa., says:"l was sick and miserable all tlast Spring and aa I did not know what was tho matter I kept going down and down until I was a physical wreck. I had smothering epells, flashes of heat ovor the kid neys and pain In pass ing the kidney secre tions, which contained sediment. My husband virged mo to try Doan's Kid ney Pills, and at last I did so. They did me much good, and I used In all eight boxes which restored me to per fect health." Sold by all dealers, 50 cents a box. Foster Milburn Co., Buffalo, N. Y. STUDY NOT A NECESSITY. End and Aim of Woman's Life, as Un dcrstood by Rosie's Mother. In one of the Philadelphia public schools is a little girl pupil whose an cestors and coreligionists have ever held that the principal end and aim of the life of a woman is marriage. This little girl is well up In most of her ctudies, but slio ha 3 an inveterate dis like of geography and It seems impos sible to teach the study to her. Tho other day her teacher, made Impatient by her seeming unwillingness to learn her geography lesson, sent to Rosie's mother a note requesting her to sec that the girl studied her lesson. The uext day showed no improvement, however, and the teacher asked Rosie whether she had delivered the note. "Yes, ma'am," was the reply. "And did your mother read the Rosie/' Rosie/' said tho teacher. "Yes, ma'm." "What did she say?" "My mother said that she didn't know geography, an' she got married, an' my aunt didn't know geography, an' she got married, an' you know geography, an' you didn't get mar ried." An Undesirable Article. When Mr. B. went to call upon some friends the other afternoon, he was on his way out of town and so had his traveling bag with him. This ho placed in a corner, and when he rose to leave he overlooked it. His hostess happened to notice it before he had reached the door, and called to her little daughter: "Marie, run after Mr. B. and tell him he has left his grip here!" The little one gave her mother one swift glance of surprise, but flew duti fully to obey orders. "Oh, Mr. 8.," they heard her say, "mother says you have forgotten to take your grip with you." Then she added, quickly, in a tone of polite apology: "You see, most all of us have had it this winter, and we'd rather not have any more!" THE QUARREL. He —Farewell! Farewell, I said, thou jade!!! A Counter Stroke. A styliskly-dressed woman entered a Chinese laundry and paid for a laundered shirt. "Why do you wear those 'rata,' I think you call them, in your hair?" in quired the Chinaman, who had an in quisitive turn of mind. "Tush, Mr. John," replied his cus tomer. "I always thought it was Chi nese etiquette not to talk about the things they like best." The Oriental blinked his eyea as tlae lady passed out. LOST S3OO. Buying Medicine When Right Food Was Needed. Money spent for "tonics" and "brac ers" to relieve indigestion, while the poor old stomach is loaded with pas try and pork, is worse than losing a pocketbook containing the money. If the money only is lost it's bad enough, but with lost health from wrong eating, it is hard to make the money back. A Mich, young lady lost money on drugs but is thankful she found a way to get back her health by proper food. She writes: "I had been a victim of nervous dys pepsia for six years and spent three hundred dollars for treatment in the attempt to get well. None of it did me any good. "Finally I tried Grape-Nuts food, and the results were such that, if it cost a dollar a package, I would not be without it. My trouble had been caused by eating rich food such as pastry and pork. "The most wonderful thing that ever happened to me, I am sure, was the change in my condition after I began to eat Grape-Nuts. I began to improve at once and the first week gained four pounds. "I feel that I cannot express my self in terms that are worthy of the benefit Grape-Nuts has brought to me, and you are perfectly free to publish this letter if it will send some poor sufferer relief, such as has come to me." Name given by Postum Co., Battle Creek, Mich. Read, "The Road to Well .Tllle," In pkgs. "There's a Reason." CAMERON COUNTY PRESS, THURSDAY, APRIL 23, 1908. NEW ARRIVALS IN CANADA NEARLY 300,000 IN 1907. ABOUT SIXTY THOUSAND FROM THE UNITED STATES. Now that It ia known that in the year Just closed nearly sixty thou sand from the United States declared their intention of making their homes in Canada, it might not be out of place to search for some reasons that would bring this about. These people are but following the example of the flfty-flve or sixty thousand who did the same thing the year previous, and an almost equal number who the year before that but followed the example of the thousands of the year preced ing. An excellent climate, certain and positive crops of grain of all kinds, good markets for their produce, land —and good land, too — at low prices, easy terms of payment, (not forget ting the ICO acres of land given free by the Government, particulars of which the Canadian Government Agent whose name appears elsewhere will tell you about) and then the splendid social conditions. The situation is pretty well sized up by a writer In one of the magazines. Quoting from this article, we find this: "Those of us who made good in the States," inter jected another settler as if to con tinue the story of his neighbor, "have bad it easy from tho etart; a little money is a mighty good thing on com ing into a new country. But those who make an entry, or even buy lands at low rates, are able to square things In two or three seasons' crops. Thera are hardships In building shanties, and then with increasing prosperity getting things into shape for better homes. But affairs go much as In the States. We have the largest liberty in the world; there is more home rule in the Provinces than in the several states of the Republic. Taxes are light and with only a few million peo ple west of Winnipeg we don't get in each other's way. One's friends over the line probably thought we would not live through the winter; and while it is cold, real cold, it is free from the moisture experienced in the east. Schools are good as encouraged by the Government; the enterprising American promoter and Yankee drum mer see to it that we take notice of the latest improvements and best agri cultural machinery. Altogether we are as near to affairs as wo would be on our own farms In the States. Winni peg bears the same relation to us as Chicago did at home; and Edmonton with the surrounding region advances as Omaha did in tho days when we were as young as tho boys yonder. We get together much as they did in the granges over the border; the gov ernment has established experimental schools of agriculture, and progress in every line is stimulated. This is a great region for grazing," we hear the Calgary citizen continuing, "and then ■with building elevators of wheat at one dollar a bushel, many of us find time togo over to the live stock ex hibition in Chicago or visit old friends during the course of the winter. Every man is taken for what he is worth or for what he can raise; and in this good air and on this fertile soil we intend to show our old friends that we are made of the right stuff— that we are chips of the old block who built up the American West." Hope. Walter Damrosch tells of a matron in Chicago who, in company with her young nephew, was attending a musical entertainment. The selections were apparently en j tirely unfamiliar to the youth; but when the "Wedding March" of Men delssohn was begun he began to evince 1 more interst. "That sounds familiar," he said. "I'm not strong on these classical pieces, but that's a good one. What is it?" "That," gravely explained the matron, "is the 'Maiden's Prayer.'"— Harper's Weekly. In a Pinch, Use ALLEN'S FOOT-EASE. A powder. It cures painful, smart ing, nervous feet and ingrowing nails, i It's the greatest comfort discovery of ! the age. Makes new shoes easy. A ! certain cure for sweating feet. Sold | by all Druggists, 25c. Accept no sub | stitute. Trial package, FREE. Ad | dress A. S. Olmsted, Le Roy, N. Y. "De Gustibus—" "Some men think that a good din ! ner is the only thing to be desired." "Yes, and there are some other men who think of a dinner as merely some thing to have a good smoke after." SLOAN'S LINIMENT For spavin, curb, splint, sweeny, capped hock, founder, strained tendons, wind puffs and all lameness in horses - For thrush, foot rot and garget on cattle and sheep - For hog distemper, hog cholera; thumps and scours in hogs- Fordiarrhoea.canker and roup in poultry - AT ALL DEALERS 04.O 4. £ * 1.00 Send For free book eft Horses. Cottle. Hogs ond Poultry— -Address Dr. Ear I S.Sloan, Boston. Masa. MACHINE-GROUND PAINT. Occasionally ope hears the "hand mixed" paint of the painter slightingly spoken of aa "unscientific" and "not thoroughly mixed." The facts are all on the side of the painter and his hand prepared paint. It la the moßt "Bclentiflo" paint there Is, because it Is made on the spot tp ■ult the particular purpose for which it is to be used. It is as scientific as a good doctor's prescription. If the painter did not mix It thus it would be aa unscientific aa & patent medi cine. Moreover, the paint which a good painter turna out is made of genuine white lead and pure linseed oil. If he does not mix it himself he is not sure what is in it, and conse quently his client cannot be aure. As for not being thoroughly mixed by machinery, that is simply a mis statement. White Lead as made by National Lead Company is thorough ly incorporated with 7 or 8 per cent, of pure Linseed oil in the factory, mak ing a paste. This paste need only be thinned with additional linseed oil to make it ready for the brush. The thorough incorporation of pig ment and oil has already been accom plished before the painter gets it. To know how to tell pure white lead la a great advantage to both painter and house-owner. National Lead Com pany will send a tester free to anyone interested. Address the company at Woodbrldge Building, New York, N. V. THAT OFFICE YARN. Mrs. A.—l think offices are horrid. My husband is out all day and aays he Is looking for an office. Mrs. Z.—How funny I Mine is out late night 6 and says he is detained at the office. Catarrh Cannot B« Cured with LOCAL APPLICATIONS, ti they cannot retch tbs •cat of tbe dinette. Catarrh la a blood or consti tutional dlaeate, and In order to cars It you mutt take Internal remedlea. Hall • Catarrh Cure la taken In ternally, and acta directly on tbe blood and mucoua aurfacea. Hall s Catarrh Cure la not a quack medi cine. It wai prescribed by one of tbe beat pbyslclani In tills country for years and la a regular prescription. It la composed of the beat tonics known, combined with tbe beat blood purlOers, actln* directly on the mucous surfaces. The perfect combination of the two ingredients Is what produces aucb wonderful re suits In curing catarrh. Send for testimonials, free. P. J. CIIKNKY i CO., Prdpa., Toledo, O. Sold by Druggists, price 75c, Take Hill's Family Pllla for constipation. Nautical Note. "Well, my girl, that young man of yours established a record last even ing." "What do you mean, pa?" "Your mother reported him off the hat rack at ten o'clock, and he hadn't made the vestibule when your brother steamed in at 12." —Modern Society. Every Woman In thin vicinity will be plail to know that local grocers now have In stork "OUU PJE." a preparation In three varieties for making Lemon, Chocolate and Custard pies. Each 10-cent package makes two pies. He sure and order to-day. "Put up by D-Zerta Co., Rochester, N.Y." A human act once set in motion flows on for ever to the great account. Our deathlessncss Is in what we do, not in what we are.—George Mere dith. Garfield Tea cannot but commend itself to thope desiring a laxative at once sim ple, pure, mild, potent and health-giving. It is made of Herbs. All drug stores. The great doers of history have al ways been men of faith. —Chapin. Mr«. Wlnslow'n Soothing Syrnp. For children toothing, soften* the gumit, reduce* In* flamiiiatlon, allays pain, cures wind colic. 25c a bottle. No honestly exerted force can be utterly lost.—Froude. PUTNAM FADELESS DYES Color more pood* brighter and faiter color* than any other dye. One tOc package color* all fiber*. They dye in cold water better than any other dye. You can dy« aoj garment without ripping apart Write lor tree bookUt—Hot* to Dye. Bleach and Mix Color*. MONROE ORUO CO., Oufncy, Ullnolm. WEPARTEg. Younger—l wonder if !I shall lose my looks, too, when I am your age? Elder—YoVll be lucky if you do. Genuine greatness It marked by simplicity, uaostentatiousness, eelf forgetfulnesa, a hearty Interest In others, a feeling of brotherhood with the human family. This woman says she was saved from an operation by Lydia E. Pinkham's Vegetable Compound. Lena V. Hemy, of Norristown, Ga., writes to Mrs. Pmkham: " I suffered untold misery from fe male troubles. My doctor said an opera tion waa the only chance I had, and I dreaded it almost as much as death. "One day I read how other women had been cured by Lydia E. Pinkham's Vegetable Compound, and I decided to try it. Before I had taken the first bottle I was better, and now I am en tirely cured. "Every woman suffering with any female trouble should take Lydia E. Pinkham's Vegetable Compound." FACTS FOR SICK WOMEN. For thirty years Lydia E. Pink ham's Vegetable Compound, made from roots and herbs, has been the standard remedy for female ills, and has positively cured thousands 01 women who have been troubled with displacements, inflammation, ulcera tion, fibroid tumors, irregularities, periodic pains, backache, that bear ing-down feeling, flatulency, indiges tion, dizziness or nervous prostration. Why don't you try it ? Mrs. Plnltliam Invites all sick women to write her for advice. She has guided thousands to health. Address, Lynn, Mass. -]\[g—] GARD-U GARDUI A Vegetable Compound I V(► I ens tbe nervous system, Improves I Ul 'I appetite, clears up tho com i . J L—l piexion. Money refunded If not benefited. Guaranteed under the Food and Drugs Act, June 30tb, lUO6. Manufactured by The Gard-U Chemical Co., Sooth Haven, Mich. Six Months' Treatment in Box Price $2.00 Thompson's Eye Water A. N. K.—C (1908—16) 2226. TT%V\T/1 AV A WHITE us FOE BOOKLET CONCERNING Riclrllv/l I H II I A IM HIV HBIOATED LANDS IN THE GREAT TWIB- Illlliuri 1. MjMJ i/Ail I/U FALLS AND JE*OME COUNTRY. IDABO. Altitude only 3700 feet above tbe sea level. Inexhaustible water supply, taken from tbe great Snake River, tbe seventh largest river in America. No alkali, no cyclones. 420,000 aoros of the finest fruit and agricultural land in the West. The man who wants a home where everything grows that makes farming profitable— on easy terms —or the man who wants land for Investment should write us, as we quote 1 nothing but absolutely reliable information. Address H. A. STROUD fit COMPANY. Twin Falls. Idaho MEMBER Q fl B MEN, BOYB, WOMEN, MISSES AND CHILDREN. W \ g than any othor msnufaeturor In tkm iMWItiWiF J&si) world, booaumo thay ho! a fhalr Put aha no, tit batter, waar longer, and *DO]& y c»/«r KC7> arm of praator valuo than mny other ■c* \W f.v'Uc «*#» ahoaa/nthamroHd to-day. ltei W. L. Douglas $4 and $5 Gl!t Edge Shoes Cannot Be Equalled At An; Price ' ' ort'AI'TIOJf. w. T„ Donglan name and price is stamped on bottom. Tnk *W» SnbHltnte. Bold by the bent nhoa dealeri everywhere, fihoe* mailed from toctorv to a - r « of JJ?JT» ' M -.1- fcatod Catalog Uxxs to auy kuidreeß. W. M*. UOIJOLAS, Mrocktou, Mbm. SICK HEADACHE |j. , | . —*./"] Pn»H'v»U' cured by RAKTFRa these Little Pills. tabal The* also relieve Dla> BpITTI P tresslroin Dyspepsia, In- WM % \0 r digestion and Too Hearty mm Il# 112 R Eating. A perfect rem- SI i||| I * e< *7 tor Dizziness, Nan- E9 r | LLwa *ea, Drowsiness, Bad Taste In the Mouth, Coat '"d Tongue, Pain in tha . TORPID LIVER. They regulate the Bowela. Purely Vegetable. SMALL PILL. SMALL DOSE. SMALL PRICE. PADTED'cI Genuine Must Bear uAnitno Fac-Simile Signature ■ IIS *■* I REFUSE SUBSTITUTES. Typical Farm Scene, Showing Stock Railing in WESTERN CANADA Some pf the choicest hinds for praln growing, stock raiding and mixed farming in the new dis tricts of Saskatchewan and Alberta have re cently been Opened lor Settlement under the Revised Homestead Regulation* Entry may now be made by proxy (on certain conditions), by the father, mother, son, daugh ter, brother or sister of an intending home steader. Thousands of homesteads of 160 acres each are thus now easily available In these Seat grain-growing, stock-raising and luucd rmlng sections. you will find healthful climate, good neighbors, churches for family worship, schools for your children, good laws, splendid crops, and railroads convenient to market. Entry fee In each case In J 10.00. For pamph let, "Last Best West," particulars as to rates, routes, best time togo and where to locale, apply to H. M. WILLIAMS, Law Bulldintf, Toledo, Ohfoi fl Absolutely big profit* raining poultry by ■■ oar approved practical method. Yori mak» B easily SBO per month, 11000 per year, from 24 ■ hens, or *«l\ o g er and outfit exactly as we claim, return it at once at our ex- H pense and jiot your Dollar back without ■ Question. The plan is worth a fortune to you. Don't delay. : THE ELWOSEHN CO. ■ 514 O. T. Johnson BJdf, Los Angels*. Cal. HAIR R EiALSAM SflaSglHfPQ/JI Glean— and beautifies ths liair. MM PrpQiotf a. luxuriant growth. vßlN'r™* Fails to Beswre Oray ! H«lr to lta Toothful Color. m h HHB A NAKEBIB gives Install ■ ■ P" reller. IB A HIM PI.E Cl'Kfc ■JB Q ■ M (1 at druggists or by rualk BV ■ ■ HI Bamplo FkKE. Address, I■ ■ ■ »"ANAKEBIS" 3 ■ MWL MM Tribune Bldg., NEW YORT. niTPIITO Watson K. COIIBU, Patent Atto* pA I M I ney, Washington, 1). 0. Advic# ■ Ml hll I W free. Terms low. Highest r*£ 7