OißDtl* >&&»% , _ i BUSINESS FARMING. Use System in the Work and It Will Pay. I have been a farmer long enough to learn the cause of so many sons and daughters and well-meaning, reli able farm hands leaving the beautiful farm and country and going to the city. A lack of order and system on the farm and too long hours for a day is what is driving the best minds from the farm to the city and shop, declares a writer in Farmers* Review. What can we expect of a hand, or the farmer's wife and her posterity, in the way of intellectual development, when they get out of their beds at 3:30 in the morning and work from that time until Bor 9 p. m.? And no attention paid to the sanitary conditions of the home, and necessary conveniences on the farm for doing the fanm work with the least labor and time. Give me the educated farmer as a boss and the educated farm hand as a-hand. When I come in contact with a hand or farmer that studies his business I find him advancing, and it Is a pleasure to work for such men. The majority of I lie farmers are eight-hour men, that is, eight hours In the forenoon and eight in the after noon. Eight or ten hours on the farm cannot well be adapted in all cases, but it need not be from 14 to 1C hours. If the family arise every morning at five o'clock and the wife and daugh ters attend to the household duties, and the farm hands and sons attend to the chores and goto the field at seven o'clock and work until 11 or 3 1:30, and goto the field again at one and keep at it until six o'clock, and goto the house and eat the supper end then do the evening chores, they have done a farm day's work. Regular hours for work and regular hours for Bleep and regular hours for rest and recreation, with plenty of standard pa pers and books, including the best ag ricultural papers and books, and a full faith in God, and good grub is wanted. The family should rise at five o'clock on Sunday morning as well as on week days, and do the necessary Sunday morning chores, and then go to church and show the business man In the city that Sunday on the farm does not consist in changing the stock from one field to another, or salting it, or unloading a load of hay that was brought in on Saturday evening. Coming to the meals at the meal hour makes it easy on the wife so she can arrange her household duties in order, as can also the husband his farm work. Men of worth and standing in the shop and city tell me that, if order and system were used on the farm they would go back to the farm. If the farmer wants to keep his sons and daughters on the farm he must not lengthen the hours for a day's work at both ends. Limit the hours of work on the farm to 12 or 13 with pay for overtime, and freedom to the hired man on Sunday. HOME MADE WHEELBARROW. Pair of Old Plow Handles, Two Gate Hinges and Old Wheel Needed. The construction of this barrow is ▼ery simple. Get a pair of old plow handles, two gate hinges about one foot long, and a wheel, which may be Wheelbarrow Made from Old Material. found at the junk dealer's. The legs of this barrow are those of an old chair, braced with a piece of iron, says the Farm and Home. These ar ticles in themselves are worthless, but in their combination we create some thing very useful. FARM PICK UPS. One of the most important consid erations of the farmer should be the water supply, both for the household and the animals. If we all would eat more fruit and less meat we would be better off. Fruit juices aid digestion, promote healthy circulation and clear the mind. Pears and apples will keep better and retain more of their plumpness and flavor if wrapped separately in tissue paper and stored in a cool place. The value of the estimated Ameri can cut of lumber, lath and shingles for 1907 is $750,000,000. In the same year the value of the corn crop was $1,336,901,000 and of the wheat crop $554,437,000. Oil will spoil the squeal of the wheel. Is there any practical way of clean lng wild onions out of a pasture ex cept by plowing and clean cultivation' Small seeds require finer soil thai large seeds. Farming for Money. Years ago we farmed to live, but now w ! farm to make money. Monej prr-'toirtina'es over health and comfort Til's is why fruit is so neglected vithe All-Wise Creator gave inai be it're he gave him bread and meat PATIENT SUFFERING. Many Women Think They Ar© 1 Doomed to Backache. It is not right for women to be al ways ailing with backache, urinary ills, headache and other tm symptoms of kidney disease. There is a way to end these troubles Mgffl Wight, 606 East First Saferyears with kidney com- 1 plaint and a doctor told me I would j never get more than temporary relief. A dragging pain and lameness in my j back almost disabled me. Dizzy spells came and went and the kidney secre tions were irregular. Doan's Kidney Pills rid me of these troubles and I feel better than for years past." Sold by all dealers. 50c a box. Fos ter-Milburn Co., Buffalo, N. Y. MAKING THE MOST OF IT. "Don't be alarmed, Miss Hash, this | microscope is merely to enable me to i see what I'm eating!" DREADFUL DANDRUFF. Girl's Head Encrusted—Feared Loss cf All Her Hair—Baby Had Milk- Crust — Missionary's Wife Made Two Perfect Cures by Cuticura. "For several years my husband was a missionary in the Southwest. Every one in that high and dry at mosphere has more or less trouble with dandruff and my daughter's scalp became so encrusted with it that I was alarmed for fear she would lose all her hair. After trying various rem edies, in desperation I bought a cake of Cuticura Soap and a box of Cuti cura Ointment. They left the scalp beautifully clean and free from dandruff, and I am happy to say that the Cuticura Remedies were a com plete success. I have also used suc cessfully the Cuticura Remedies for socalled 'milk-crust' on baby's head. Cuticura is a blessing. Mrs. J. A. Darling, 310 Fifth St., Carthage, Ohio, Jan. 20. 1908." Potter Drug Jt Ctaem. Corp., Bole I'rops., Boston. Take Warning, Girls! Cupid is always painted with wings, perhaps to show how easily he can fly away. Mnay women forget this once they are married, and the man who fell in love with his wife, because, be fore marriage, she always looked so dainty and well groomed, is sometimes woefully disappointed to find how lit tle care she v«kes over her appearance for ordinary, everyday occasions after wards. It isn't fair to any husband to let oneself go in this way. If you do, and find that very soon Cupid flies out at the window, you will have only yourself to blame. —Home Chat. Valuable Conch Shells. The conch shell is highly prized in India. In many of the temples they are blown daily to scare away the ma lignant spirits while the god receives his daily meal. A conch with the spiral twlstings to the right instead of to the left is supposed to be worth its weight in gold. Some years ago a conch of that description was offered for bale in Calcutta, with a reserve pries of a lakh of rupees placed on it. It was eventually bought in for $20,000. Rather Hard. The messenger entered the palace with the dispatches. "Brimstone and asphalt!" ejaculated Castro, as he read the yellow slip. "Holland threatens to spank us." "Well, what of it, your excellency?" responded the secretary. "Other na tions have threatened to do the same." "Yes, but, confound it, this 'is a spanking that will hurt. The Dutch wear wooden shoes." A Woman's Threat. "Well, if that ain't the limit," mused the postman, as he came down the steps of a private residence. "What's the trouble?" queried the passing citizen, who had overheard the postman's noisy thought. "Why," explained the man in gray, "the woman in that house says if I don't come along earlier she'll get her letters from some other carrier." ROSY AND PLUMP Good Health from Right Food. "It's not a new food to me," re marked a Va. man, in speaking of Grape-Nuts. "About twelve months ago my wife was in very bad health, could not keep anything on her stomach. The Doctor recommended milk half water but it was not sufficiently nourishing. "A friend of mine told me one day to try Grape-Nuts and cream. The re sult was really marvelous. My wife : soon regained her usual strength and today is as rosy and plump as when a girl of sixteen. "These are plain facts and nothing I could say in praise of Grape-Nuts would exaggerate in the least the I value of this great food." S Name given by Postum Co., Battle Creek, Mich. Read "The Road to Well ville," in pkgs. "There's a Reason." 112 Ever rend the above letter* A new •lie Mlinenr* from time to time. They re upiiuiue, true, antl full of human dtcrent. CAMERON COUNTY PRESS, THURSDAY, JANUARY 21, 1909. WHY NOT OHM LAND? ONE OF THE BEST WAYS TO MAKE MONEY <8 TO INVEST IN WESTERN CANADA. "Deop down In the nature of every properly constituted man is the desire to own some land." A writer in the | lowa State Register thus tersely ex presses a well-known truth. The ques- | tion is where is the best land to be ! had at the lowest prices, and this the same writer points out in the same ar ticle. The fact is not disguised that the writer has a personal interest in the statement of his case, and there is 110 hidden meaning when ho refers to Western Canada as presenting great er possibilities than any other part of the American Continent, to Ihe man | who is inclinca to till the soil for a livelihood and possible competence. J What interests one are the arguments ' advanced by this writer, and when j fairly analyzed the conclusion is j reached that no matter what personal j interest the writer may have had, his ! reasons appear to have the quality of ; great soundness. The climatic condi tions of Western Canada are fully as : good as those of Minnesota, the Dako tas or lowa, the productiveness of the soil is as great, the social conditions are on a parity, the laws are as well established and as carefully observed. ! In addition to these the price of land j is much less, easier to secure. So, with these advantages, why shouldn't this I —the offer of Western Canada —be ! embraced. The hundreds of thousands 1 of settlers now there, whose homes were originally in the United States, appear to be —are satisfied. Once in j awhile complaints are heard, but the 1 Canadians have never spoken of the \ country as an Eldorado no matter 1 what they may have thought. The i writer happened to have at hand a few letters, written by former residents of i ihe United States, from which one or ! two extracts are submitted. These go | to prove that the writer in the Regis i ter has a good basis of fact in support | of his statements regarding the excel ; lency of the grain growing area of Manitoba, Saskatchewan and Alberta, j On the 29th of April of this year W. R. Conley, of Lougheed, Alberta, wrote a friend in Detroit. He says:"The weather has been just fine ever since i I came here in March, and I believe ! one could find if he -wanted to some | small bunches of snow around the j edge of the lake. There is a frost near | ly every morning: at sunrise it begins j to fade away, then those blue flow ! ers open and look as fresh as if there | had been no frost for a week. . . . j There is no reason why this country I should not become a garden of Eden; the wealth is In the ground and only j needs a little encouragement from tho | government to induce capital in here. | There is everything here to build j with: good clay for brick; coal under neath, plenty of water in the spring lakes, and good springs coming out of j tho banks." Splendid. "That's a fine looking maid you have j now, dear." "Yes, she's a darling, and she came to me highly recommended." "Knows all about the latest styles of maiding, I suppose?" "Oh, so far as knowing the duties of a maid goes, I don't suppose she knows a thing." "But she came highly recommended, you said?" "Yes, she broke the jaw of the last man who tried to kiss her." —Houston Post. BREAKS A COLD PROMPTLY The following formula is a never failing remedy for colds: One ounce of Compound Syrup of j Sarsaparilla, one ounce Toris Com | pound and one-half pint of good i whiskey, mix and shake thoroughly each time and use in doses of a table- I spoonful every four hours. This if followed up will cure an I acute cold in 24 hours. The ingre dients can be gotten at any drug store. - - Broadening His Purpose. [ "Yes, the old millionaire left the col ; lege a hundred thousand to endow a Greek chair." "That's fine." "Well, the faculty thought It better to broaden the purpose of the gift. In i stead of using the money for a single i Greek chair they bought all the ssats i for the new stadium with it." Hon. Einil Kianp;, Vienna, Aus., one of I the world's greatest horsemen, has written to the manufacturers: "iSI'OHN'S DIS j TEMPER COMPOUND has become the | standard remedy for distempers and throat j diseases in the best stables of Europe. I This medicine relieves Horses of «reat suf j ferine and saves much money for the own- I er." 50c and $1 a bottle. All druggists. SPOHN MEDICAL CO., Goshen, Ind. A Rare Change. | A Boston woman says she can't live j with her husband because he is too j good. And the wicked bromide user will i probably suggest that he is too good to be true. —Cleveland PlhJk Dealer. The Tactful Husband. "How did you cure your wife of chattering so much?" "I told her that when her lips were closed they formed a perfect Cupid's bow." —Cleveland Leader. ONLY ONE "BKOMO QUININE" That lis LAXATIVH HROMO OUININB. J.ook foi tho signature of K. W. iJKOVK. Used the World over to Cure a Cold In One Day. 26c. What a splendid thing it would be If people who lose their tempers were unable to find them again! Allen's Foot-E)iHn,H Fimder For swollen, sweating fort. Ciivt-s Instant relief. The original powder for the feet. 26c at all Druggists. Better one discreet enemy than two I Indiscreet friends. TRY THIS FOR COLDS Mix half ounce of Concentrated pln« compound with two ounces of glyc eric and a half pint of good whiskey; shake it well each time and use la doses of a teaspoonful to a tablespoon ful every four hours. These Ingredients can be obtained from any good druggist who will pre pare the mixture, or it can be mixed at home. This is said to be the quickest cough and cold cure known to science, and at the same time it has a splendid tonic effect which benefits the whole system. The Concentrated pine is a special pine product refined for medical use and comes only In half ounce bottles, each enclosed in a round case, which is air tight, to retain all the original strength of the fluid, but be sure it is labeled "Concentrated." EASY FOR THE PAINTER. Worthy Individual Had All the Details In His Mind. A Chicago artist relates how a weal thy individual from Kansas City, with his wife and three sons and four daughters, once called upon him. "Here we are!" exclaimed the head of the family. "Nearly a dozen of us, Mr. Painter. How much for a paint ing of the whole of us, discount for cash?" "That will depend," answered the artist, hiding a smile with his hand, "upon the dimensions, style, etc." "Oh, that's all fixed," responded the other breezily, with the air of a man who knows exactly what he wants. "We are to be dashed off in one piece as large as life, sitting on the lawn of my place just outside of little old K. C., singing 'Hail Columbia!'" —Har- per's Weekly. ACCOMMODATING. Doctor (toman who has fallen) — You need a strong punch of some kind. Mr. Flynn (an old enemy)— Let me give it to him, doc! Deafness Cannot Be Cured by local applications, aa they cannot reach the dis eased portion of the ear. There U» only one way to j cure deafness, and that is by constitutional remedies, i Deafneaa is caused by an Inflamed condition of tho I raucous lining of the Eustachian Tube. When this 1 tube is Inflamed you have a rumbling sound or im perfect hearing, and when It Is entirely closed, Deaf ness Is the result, and unless the Inflammation cun be taken out and this tube restored to lis normal condi tion, hearing will be destroyed forever; nine cases out of ten are caused by Catarrh, which is nothing but an Inflamed condition of the mucous surfaces. I We will give One Hundred Dollars for any cane ol j Deafness (caused by catarrh) that cannot be cured I by Hall's Catarrh Cure. Send for-circulars, free. F. J. CHENEY A CO., Toledo, O. ! Bold by Druggists. 75c. | Take Hall's Family Fills for constipation. Prince Rupert's Drops. Prince Rupert's drops are drops of molten glass, consolidated by falling to water. Their form is that of a tad pole. The thick end may be ham | mered pretty smartly without Its break j ing, but if the smallest portion of the j thin end is nipped ofT the whole files I into fine dust with explosive violence, i These toys, if not invented by Prince Rupert, were introduced by him into | England. Too Skeptical for Fairies. The modern child believes In fairlei I probably no more than he does in San ita Claus. The next generation will [ most likely dispense with children's I books altogether. And yet, it is said, and no doubt truly, that there was never an age when so much literature for children's use was written. — La dles' Field. This Will Interest Mothers. Mother Gray's Sweet Powders for Chil dren, used by Mother Gray, a nurse In Children's Home, New York, cure Consti pation, Feverishness, Teething Disorders, Stomach Troubles and Destroy Worms; 30,000 testimonials of cures. AH druggists, 25c. Sample FREE. Address Allen S. Olm sted, Le Roy, N. Y. His Explanation. "What does you reckon dey means ;by sayin': 'Last of all come Satan?"' "Hit means dat he waits 'twel all de ; crowd is in an' den whirls in an' nabs ae whole business!" —Exchange. Garfield Tea, the Herb Laxative, agree ably stimulates the liver, corrects constipa tion and relieves a clogged system. Write for samples. Garfield Tea Co., Brooklyn, N. Y. Cleaning upsets a house almost as badly as it does a watch. IMI.KS CURED IN 6 TO 14 I>AYN. PAZO OINTMENT Is guaranteed to cure anv case of Itching, Jtlind, Bleeding or Protruding Files in oto 14 days or money refunded. 60c. The secret of success is a secret women never tell. PUTNAM FADELESS DYES Color more poods brighter and taster colors than ant other dye. One 10c pacnaoe colors all fibers. They dye in cold water better than any other dye. You can *N aw garaenf without rippina apart Writ* loflrMlMokfet-auw to Dye, Blaaoh and Mix Colors. MONROE DRUG CO., Qu!ne.y r '/// no/a. Cfotfavet/ When shown positive and reliable proof that a certain remedy had cured numerous cases of female ills, wouldn't any sensible woman conclude that the same remedy would also benefit her if suffering with the same trouble ? Here are two letters which prove the efficiency of Lydia E. Pinkham's Vegetable Compound. Rc Address Mrs. Pinkham, Lynn, Mass. tAll shoes are made in much lere's the difference. Stvlish White House Shoes fit mEbljlf Not the ordinary binding fit. Not the fit a that takes three .weeks to break in. But the graceful fit that feels snug the first time. And stays snug and graceful all times. WHITE HOUSE SHOES FOR MEN 53.60,84.00,85.00 and 86.00 FOR WOMEN 83.50, 84.00 and 86-00 BUSTER BROWN i'bbu.i SHOES a! glkls— 1 B roil mi L ILLUSTRATED HISTORY OF TIIE WHITE HOCSE FREE Cpnn receipt of 4c to cover postage, we will mall to thoso sending a certiflcate properly Bicrmtl by a shoedeulor. showing the purchase of a pair of "White House" shoes, o complete aot of four volumes of tho ••white HOisK liIbTOKY." Orwlllsond for 2ie, without certificate. THE BROWN SHOE CO. W 111 St. Louis, Mo. MAPLEINI SIGK HEADACHE A , —I.ZI Positively cured by CARTERS