HER DESTINATION IN DOUBT. Lltt!# Girl's Remark Net Complimen tary to Grandma. Ethel is of the mature ag« of Are Recently her grandmother concluded that it devolved on her to instruct the child In religious matters. "You must be a good girl, Ethel," she said. "Then you will goto heaven when you die." Ethel seemed scarcely pleased with this reward for exceptional conduct. "Don't you want togo to heaven?" asked grandma, with a look of re proach. "Oh, I don't know," temporized Ethel. "I guess not." "Why not?" demanded grandma, severely. "Because maybe I couldn't get out," answered Ethel. "You wouldn't want to get out," re plied grandma. "Oh, yes. I should," returned Ethel, with conviction. "No," argued grandma, "you would not Why should you want to get out of heaven?" "Why," answered Ethel, "1 guess I'd want togo and see you once in a while, wouldn't 1?" —Woman's Homo Companion. INVALID'S SAD PLIGHT. After Inflammatory Rheumatism, Hair Cn.re Out, S!\<i Peeled, and iitrc-s developed—Only C^" 1 Prove J S'..~>:ec:;ful. "About four yeani aps 1 had * novero attack of inflammatory rheuma tism. My skin peeled, and tho higl fever played havoc with my hair, which came out in buncnes. I also had three large bed sores or. my back. I did not gain very rapidly, and my appetite was very poor. I tried many "sure cures' but they were of little help, end until I tried Cuticura Re solvent Iliad had no real relief. Then my complexion cleared and t:oon I felt better. The bed sores wer.t very soon after a few applications of Cuticura Ointment, and vhen I used Cuti cura Soap and' Ointment for my hair it began to regain its former glossy ap pearance. Mrs. Lavina J. Henderson, 138 Broad St., Stamford, Conn., March C and 12, 1007." FROM A NOVEL. Bhe stond gazing into empty space An All-Round Bock. The book agent had spent a dis couraging morning, and when he had Bn opportunity to ccan the face of Ell Hobbs at close range, he felt that there was small chance of making a sale. However, he had more than one method of suggestion. "Silting out here en the piar.za after noons with your wife, this would be the very book to read aloud," he said, Ingratiatingly, to Mr. Hobbs, taking the other rc?!-i"s cMir ar.d opening tl.e large rcd-ccvere.l volume. "I don't read and I haven't any wife." replied Mr. Hobbs, dryly. "Dear me!" said the book agent "Well, if your wife is dead, perhaps there are children. Now, children find thfs bcok —" 'There are no children," interrupted Mr. Hobbs. "There's nobody nut my self and my cat." "Well," said the hook agent, "don't you ever want a good heavy book is throw at her, just to ease your feel ings'.'"—Youth's Companion. "TWO TOPERS." A Teacher's Experience. "My friends call ire 'The Postum Preacher,"' writes a Minn, school teach er, "because I preach the gospel of Postum everywhere 1 go, and have been the means cf liberating many 'coffee-pot slaves.' "I don't carc what they call me so long as I car: help others to see what they lose by sticking to coffee, and can show them the way to steady nerves, clear brain and general good health by using Postum. "While a school girl I drank coffee and had fits of trembling and went through a siege cf nervous prostration, which took me three years to rally from. "Mother coaxed me to use Postum, but I thought coffee would give mo strength. So things went, and when I married 1 found my husband and I rere both coffee topers, and I can sympathize with a drunkard who trieß to leave off his cups. "At last in sheer desperation I bought, a package of Postum, followed directions about boiling it, served it with good cream. and asked my hus band how he liked the coffee. "We each <i:.ink three cups apiece, and what a satisfied fee-ling it left. Our conversion has lasted several years and will continue as long as we live, for it has made u.. new—nerves are steady, appe tiles good, sleep sound and refreshing." I here s a Reason." Name given by Postum Co., Battle Creek, Mich. liead ihe Road to \\ ellville," in pkgs. Ever read the above letter? A new one appears from time to time. They are genuine, true, and full of human interest. d 1:;, A HANDY BARN. It Will Accommodate Seven Horse# and Ten Cows. Here are plans for a handy barn. It will hold seven head of horses and about ten head of cows. A crib op posite the feedway will hold about COO bushels of corn and an oats bin adjoin ing this will hold from 1,000 to 1,200 bushels of that grain. This leaveß a space 15x1 S for implements, hay or anything that the farmer may wish to _E3 c=n 5.... DOOR j poo? is rr ; 9rr CORN OMTV3 MACHINE j j CRIB BIN ROOM ! 5 i a » ; t , i! • ° ; u * HORSE -STALL'S ' 'v- -.j raji 1 v. A Handy Barn. Putin it. Ths doors on the cow shed are wide enough so you "an drive through them with a wagon or manure spreader. The hor3e stable has double stalls ten feet wide and 15 feet from Inside of manger to the wall. This, together with the fact that the doors are eight feet wide, enable you to get out with your team very easily. The size of the structure is 35x38 feet, with a hay mow over the lower floor. The eaves are six feet, affording more than usual protection to the outside of the building. The accompanying plan, says the Journal of Agriculture, will give the reader a better understand ing of the interior arrangement. LIVE CTOCK INDUSTRY. Gocd Profit in the Business If It Is Managed Right. The live stock industry is one of the very great industries of this coun try and will continue to be such for centuries to come. The conditions in this country make the production of stock one of the most profitable of enterprises. The lands are as yet comparatively cheap and hence will pay a good profit in the business of stock producing, provided the right kind of farming is carried on in con junction with the raising of the live stock. That right kind of farming must include the raising of a large amount of roughage of such a charac ter that the farm animals will eat it almost entirely. If this roughage he corn or some other plant rich in car b:>n it is an easy way of Iransferrring the carbon of the air to the carcasses of the cattle. With some stock many a farmer can collect from the air free carbon and sell it in the various prod ucts that come from the animal world. No matter how high-priced land be comes, the farmer cannot afford to forego the profits that would come to him from being able to grow herba ceous plants of a rank nature and transform them into a high-priced salable product. THE GOOD SCRUB. Find Her Out and Then Keep Her and Breed from Her. It would be a good thing if we had a system of testing the scrub cows that are good milkers. It is a fact that every farmer understands that here and there in the multitude of scrub cows is a milk cow of great value, and a cow, too, that, seems to have the ability to pass her large milk ing qualities down to her progeny. It is too bad that any good milking strains should pass from the land. It must be remembered, says the Farm ers' Review, that all the present breeds came out of the great mass of caule, and that there was a time when all cattle were scrubs. The possibili ties that we have discovered and de veloped in the selected breeds existed In the undeveloped breeds and some of the large milking strains are to be found in the cows that are without pedigree. Moreover, many of these scrub cows have in them the bloeid of the improved breeds. Well-Lighted Cow Stables. It is not easy to pet all farmers to let enough light into their cow stables. Yet the matter is so important that some states are passing laws compel ling every man that produces milk for city consumption to put more windows Into his cow stable if he has less than a certain number. Farmers should not wait for a law to be passed com pelling them to do thin, but should be more ready to do it than the law makers are to have them do it. In the darkness lurk the germs that will be disastrous to animals and humans. Moisture and darkness are the natural conditions under which some of our most faial diseases are produced. Right Kind of Draft Horses. In the breeding of horses for the ciiv the kind should be bred that can be used in the work of ordinary team ing, for in this is the- greatest demand. This is especially true of the larger horses. The medium sized draft horse may be bred to do .vork on the farm. He is particularly well adapted to the large farms where heavy farm ma chinery is now used in place of the lighter kinds formerly in use. CAMERON COUNTY PRESS, THURSDAY, JUNE 25, 1908. HORSES BOLTING GRAIN. Several Reasons Why They Get Habit How to Cure Them. When a horse bolts his grain the first step should be to see that his teeth are in proper order, as sharp points or other irregularities may be making it impossible for him properly to masticate his grain, and may easily be set right by judicious use of the veterinary rasps sold for the purpose. Next it is important that the horse should be allowed a sufficient length of time in which comfortably and properly to masticate his food. If he is rushed Into and out of the stable at noon he soon learns to bolt his food, as the habit comes from hurry and hunger. In addition to allowing am ple time for grain eating discourage bolting by feeding the grain from a box with a very wide bottom, so that it will be thinly under which circumstances the horse will find it impossible to grab a full mouth ful to be bolted unmasticated. Put ting some cobblestones in the feed box also helps to prevent bolting, and an other excellent plan suggested by the Rural New Yorker is to mix some hard peas, horse beans or even shelled corn with the oats, as the horse will chew well to enjoy the flavor of the added grains, and incidentally grind his oats thoroughly. The objection to feeding sheaf oats in place of oats is that a horse has 1 small stomach, the capacity of wlicl, is but tii.ee and one-half gallons or thereabout, BO that he needs concentrated food in small quantities often when at hard work. Oats have to be fully masticat od in the mouth, where tliey are drenched with the saliva, which acts •ipon the starchy matters. The oats ihen pass to the stomach, where they remain for hours for full action of the gastric juice, which acts upon the pro tein constituents; then the partially digested food passes slowly along the many feet of small intestines, after meeting the digestive fluids of the duodenum, and gives up most of its nutrients to the absorbent organs during the journey to the large intes tine. On the contrary, hay, straw and fodder, after partial mastication in the mouth, pass quickly through the stomach and are stored in the large in testines (caecum and colons), and if fed with oats or just after oats tend to force the grain out of the stomach un digested. Theoretically a horse should therefore be fed hay first and then oats or other concentrates, and as va ter passes through the stomach to the caecum it should be given always before feeding. THE STOCK. Dusty hog yards are fruitful of dis orders in the lungs of the pigs, and such disorders are frequently taken for cholera. One cow will make more milk out of a hundred pounds of food than will another. The cow that makes the most milk from a hundred pounds of fond is worth the most. Rape is a good plant to grow for sheep pasture in the latter part of the summer and in the fall. It can be sown at any time in spring and early summer. The sow must be carefully taken care of if the best results are to be obtained with her in breeding opera tions. She should not be turned into a lot where conditions are such that she will have to jump over ditohes, crawl between rails, or where she will be tempted to try her ability to climb half tumbled down fences. On the dairy farm where pasturing is practiced, there is no more impor tant thing than the pasture. It »s probable that in most localities the grass that grows in the pasture yields a larger profit than any other feed. 1 hat is because its expenses are re duced to the least possible surn. 1 is a great thing not to have to curt and harvest the grass. The cows harvest it. without expense to the owner and have it in a condition that yields the greatest possible amount of nutriment. CHICKEN EATING HOGS. Board Across the Eyes Will Cure Them, It IG Said. Pieces of tin four inches wide and about eight inches long with four holes punched in the upper edges were tied in the ears of two hogs who were Cure for the Chicken Eater. in the habit of catching and eating chickens and proved an effective hin drance. The hogs wearing this device were able to see enough to eat and drink, but were obliged to refrain from indulging in their favorite pastime. The Veterinarians. The good veterinarian should be en couraged, for the country needs him. The good veterinarian is almost al ways the graduate of a veterinary col lege. There are a great many unskill ful and unscientific men practicing as veterinarians to-day. They have not passed through the veterinary schools and their information is largely picked up. In picking up this information they have gathered with it a good deal of misinformation. The latter makes the unqualified veterinarian a danger ous man. Many a good animal has been ruined by being treated for a disease he did not have, or by being given a medicine dangerous in the hands of a man not understanding it. ONE WOMAN'S ENDURANCE. Southern Woman Suffers Torture Without Complaint. Racked and torn with terrific pains, nightly annoyed by kidney irregulari ties, Mrs. A. S. Payne, of 801 Third ave. So., Columbus, kJB Miss., suffered for •. Vj years. She says: rjS' "The pains in my back, sides and loins were so terrible that BI1K& 1 often smothered a scream. Every move meant agony. My rest was broken by a troublesome weakness and the se cretions seemed to burn like acid. I was in an awful condition and doctors did not seem to help me. Doan's Kid ney Pills benefitted me from the first and soon made me a strong and healthy woman." For sale by all dealers. 50 cents a box. Foster-Milburn Co.. Buffalo, N. Y. A Bare Possibility. In his diary, which is incorporated In the "Life and Letters of Sir Richard Claverhouse Jebb," the great Greek scholar recorded a flash of his own wit which is of a most appealing variety. At a dinner at Cambridge Sir Rich ard, then Mr. Jebb, took in a young woman, who got through the first course with little conversation. Sud denly she startled him by saying, in the unprovoked way, while she wa3 stiil dining with apparent goou appetite: "Prof. Jebb, do you think women ever die cf a broken heart?" "Perhaps other organs may have something to do with it,"he proffered in reply.—Youth's Companion. Nothing to Speak Of. "You are to take these capsules," said Dr. Fussy, "before meals, not after, remember." "Oh!" said the patient. "I guess it doesn't matter much." "But it does matter, sir!" "You wouldn't say that, doctor, if you had ever had a meal in our board ing house."—Catholic Standard and Times. NOTARIES & JUSTICES will hear of something to their advantage by writing Taber & Whitman, Attorneys, Washington, J). C. This above all; to thine own self be true; and it must follow, as the night the day, thou canst not then be false to any man. —Shakespeare. s iW The Kind You Have Always Bought, and "which has been *a * a us o for over 30 years, has borne the signature of Spg, ~~ ■ ■'■'■■■f^r=====f and has been made under his per- J ° n PEli cENr - I Sonal supervision since its infancy, s j 9 able I^paTullonfirAs- 1 Allow no one to deceive you in this, ycA vj C l^thc Foo J ami Regula 1 All Counterfeits, Imitations and"« Just-as-good" are but '& -IC Momacflsordlicwclspf j Experiments that trifle with and endanger the health of Infants and Children—Experience against Experiment* Ijit Promotes DigesHonJCheerfU- SS CASTORIA ncss and Itest.Containsneither „ , , . . _ __ _ x _ jPjP Opiiuu.MorphiuC nor Miami. Castoria is a harmless substitute for Castor Oil, Pare- NOT NARCOTIC. goric, Drops and Soothing Syrups. It is Pleasant. It H*' - contains neither Opium, Morphine nor other Narcoti® maj i J*cyeerolaDi££<znmam. substance. Its ago is its guarantee. It destroys Worm* Pbnftin S*d- and allays Feverishness. It cures Diarrhoea and Wind jfunSmt* I and Flatulency. It assimilates tho Food, regulates the li»JQ ? ! Stomach and Bowels, giving healthy and natural sleep. (hSuiimr' I The Children's Panacea—The Mother's Friend. C wSSSfitn flajv. I HQ ft Consflpa GEWUENE CASTORIA ALWAYB Ssß< Hon.SourStouiach.Dtarrhoea ' Wi iISoS Worms .Convulsions .Feverish Bears the Signature of ER>Q~fc| HCSSfIIuILOSS OFSLEER. Bfel. racSunHe Signature of *Jr -A-liLJSSJ IiLJSSJ |JBS&IiBS The Kind Yon Have Aliajs Bought iwfeg32o" f»iinrantped undertheFOwani U w In Use For Over 30 Years Exact Copy of Wrapper. THK CCNTAUR OOMPAN*. TT —WWHAT TWIT, NCMT TOM CITV. | Use ALLEN'S FOOT-EASE I tA powder to be shaken into the shoes. Tour feet feel swollen, nervous, hot and get tired easily. If you havo aching, smarting feet, try Allen's Foot-Easo. It rests the feet and makes new or tight shoes easy; always use it to Break in New Shoes. It cures swollen, hot, sweating feet, blisters, ingrowing nails and callous spots. Relieves corns and bunions of all pain and gives Rest and Comfort. It cuies while you walk. Wo have over thirty thousand testimonials. Try it to-day. Sold by all Druggists everywhere 25 cents. Don't, accept any substitute for Allen's Foot-Ease. Trial package FREE. Address, Allen S. Olmsted, Lo Roy, N. Y. European Branch Office, Peterborough, England. Wf • Success brings imitations. Scores of wV -E.l xi vJT • -worthless imitations are sometimes offered for sale. Insist upon having Allen's Foot« Ease. The Original powder for the feet. Twelve years before the public. ? Annual sales over two million packages. Do not accept spurious substitutes claimed to be "just as good." Imitations ~a — , & ;, pay the dealer a larger profit otherwise you would never be offered a substitute for Allen's Foot- Ease. Ask for Allen's Foot-Ease, and insist upon having it. - lyjgx Remember, Allen'sFoot-Ease is sold only in 25 cent packages bearing yellow label with oar trade mark and facsimile signature Sold by all PRURGIMA evrrywhrro for 25 cents. For FREE Trial packape, also Fre« Rample of tho FOOT-EASE SANITARY CORN-PAD, A new invention, address Allen 8. Olmsted, LIE Roy, N. Y. , SOUNDS FAMILIAR. j "The End of a Long Life." "Internal Revenue" Collections. The term "internal revenue" has been restricted in its meaning to such revenues only as are collected under the internal revenue bureau con nected with the treasury department, and does not include all revenues that are, properly speaking, from internal sources, that is, from sources other than duties levied at the frontiers upon foreign commodities. Thus, moneys arising from the sale of public lands, from patent fees, or the reve nues of the postal service, are not gen erally known as "internal revenues." Milder Definition. At Emersn's dinner table one day there was mention of a woman well known as a lion hunter; and, in speak ing 01 Lor, Mrs. Emerson used the word "snob." Mr. Emerson objected, the word was too harsh; he didn't like that ugly class of worJs begin ning with "till." His wife Inquired how he would characterize the lady. "I should say"—very slowly—"she ia a person having great sympathy with success." Matter of Orthography. Her Brother —I hope you are not gt> ing to marry young Bounder. He ia absolutely without principle. His Sister—That's strange. He told me he lived 011 the interest of Lis money—and how can there be any Ir terest if there's no principal? Try Murine Eye Remedy For Red. Weak, Weary, Watery Eye* Murine Doesn't Smart—Soothes Eye Pain. 1 All Druggists Sell Murine at 50cts. The 4S I Page Hook in each Pkg. is worth Dollars I in every home. Head it. We will Mail all our Eye Books Free—Write us to-day. Asl< your Bruggist. Murine Eye Remedy Co., Chicago. Good manners are the blossoms of good sense, and, it may be added. | good feeling, too.—Locke. S.y ru ptffigs §Senna acts OentU/j/et prompt-* ly on u\e bowels, cleanses {ne system ojjectually. assists one in overcoming Kabitual constipation permanently. To get its, beneficial effects buy XI I i > The genuine. Manufactured by tKe CALIFORNIA fie Syrup Co. SOLD BYUTADING DRUGGISTS-SCM SICK HEADACHE jt_ . * Z1 Positively cured by CARTERS T' u ""„ r '"L mm They also relier# Pl»- WPSTTLC trcMfrom D;ipepal»,l» I V/rit <ii i'l Holland Too Hearty Jgjß n iif r K A p tiled r«i» m& »«i| i cO} for Dizziness, |Mj| v (Llads sea, Drowaintßs, Ba4 ; > T.ist* in the Month, Coa% 1 112 e.l innpue, P.vin in th« ■■'■imi 1: i,l», TORPID LIVE*. They xejfulat« the Bovelu. Purely Vrjetabl* SMALL FILL. SMALL DG3E. SMALL PRICE^ Genuine Must Bear UAmtftO Fac-Simile Signature ifpRJLs! ™S REFUSE SUBSTITUTES. mmmTONE _*sst in mm laißimiii i— iii ii■!■ Malarial F" arm Have yon the blues? Tone up yourityslem and CURES I everything will brlrfhtea ma i AL>I A I up. Nulled on receipt t of prlce s 23 cents. THE MED ATONE CO. }23 E. 23rd Street. NEW YORK A3THMA and HAY FEVER «VI B lilllN POSITIVELY CURED by KINMONTH'S ASTHMA CURE ( *wr XVU patients cured during the print 8 A. £*C real trial bottle sent to any nddre&s on reccdpt A 25ct* UK. 11. 8. KINMOSTH, Asbury Park If. J» A. N. K.—C (1908—25) 2235. 7
Significant historical Pennsylvania newspapers