WhOEIME IPtoiMEf us I®M> to wasa® taßt *x EN AT LEAST one section of the United States at the pres ent time a large family of small children means wealth and the more kiddies a man happens to have the more for tunate is he considered. This is on the Navajo Indian reservation, in northern Arizona and northwestern New Mexico, where the government Is now making individual land allot ments to the tribespeople on the basis of 160 acres to each and every In dian, irrespective of age, sex or con dition. So it happens that the bach elor is condemned to land poverty, with a beggarly quarter section, while the married man with a large swarm of little papooses at once comes Into control of a landed estate limited only by the number of his offspring. Now It happens that polygamy has always been practiced by the Nava- Jos, and If a brave happens to have several wives he ia in luck Indeed. Each 'vlfe is good for a quarter sec tion, as well as each youngster. So, inasmuch as the process of allotment is slow and is bound to consume sev eral years before all the wandering Bedouins of the desert can be round ed up and corralled upon Individual farms, Dan Cupid has been boosted into amazing popular- ity and the most ar dent Rooseveltian would search in vain in that particular sec tion of the desert for indication of race sui- cide. With wives and children worth ICO-acre farms (and their value guar anteed by the government.. Just like sliver certificates and banknotes), these commodities are worth having and the Navajo buck who has neither is hustling for both, while he who has one or both is hustling for more. But the fact that a wife is worth 160 acres of land has boosted the price of wives to such an extent that a poor man can hardly, if at all, raise the wherewithal for the purchase of one. For the Navajos have bought their wives since the beginning of im memorial tradition paying the squaw's father in ponies, sheep, goats, cattle, hides, wool, silver or any other commodity acceptable to both buyer and seller. Naturally the father of a marriageable girl feels that she is worth 160 acres of land to him. If some brawny brave wants her he must raise the ante. So it happens that Uncle Sam has been a real bull on the squaw market, giving her a higher valuation than was ever be fore dreamed of by the warriors of the southwest. So the poor but ambitious buck finds it difficult to better his condi tion by entering the state of matri mony as an investment. The price of wives is too high for any but the wealthy to afford such a luxury. As might be anticipated, neither the rich nor the poor of the Navajoes are at all pleased with the rumors that have reached them of the govern ment's ultimate intentions. They are well satisfied to take their land allot ments, but if any attempt is made to compel them to live upon their lands there will be trouble. They have been accustomed to wandering wherever the spirit moved them —driving their flocks and herds before them and stopping wherever water was abun dant and pasturage good. To be cor ralled in, fenced-in farms and com pelled to live year after year in the same place will prove intolerable. To confine a Navajo on a 160-acre farm will work as great a hardship on him as to shut a white man up in a 6ix by ten prison cell. The Navajo reservation comprises an area of perhaps 15,000,000 acres and estimates of the number of tribespeople vary all the way from 18,000 to 28,000. It might appear, then, that their reservation was big enough to give them all elbow room. The Navajos have never thought so and pay not the slightest heed to res ervation limits. Without so much as saying "by your leave," they have ta ken possession of the major part of the reservations of the Hopls of Ari zona and the Zunis of New Mexico. Then they are scattered all over southern Utah, southwestern Colorado and the public lands of northern New Mexico and Arizona. They occupy an area larger than the entire state of Pennsylvania and will do a lot of grumbling at any attempt to curtail their liberty of movement. Of course they do not need more than a small fraction of this land for the pasturing of their sh«?p, goats, cattle and horses; but they have always been semi-nomadic in their habits, moving to a new location whenever they felt like it. In many ways the Navajo Is not a bad fellow. His peculiarities are faults when judged by the white man's standards. But why should Tve pre sume to measure the red man's oats in our half-bushel basket? For one thing, he knows no distinction of meum and tuum • and would rather steal than buy from any person or at any time. Again, the truth is not in him; or, if it is, it is so deeply buried that it never reaches the surface; and\ Ingratitude is So universal „that its' opposite is inconceivable in the con duct of a Navajo. Then Ills weakness for many wives may be counted against him; but perhaps this should be I, Considered lack' of wisdom r'htfter than a moral lapse. Two wives is the common allotment, but some have been known to have 12. Sometimes it happens that a man's wives quarrel. Then he separates them, building for each a hogan, separated, if possible, by a rock, a hillock or a convenient butte, which neither is supposed to pass. The mother-in-law joke of the news paper paragraphers Is as old as civili zation, but among the Navajos it is a grim and ever-present tragedy. For a man to look In the face of his mother in-law is believed to be a certain pre cursor of a long train of incalculable evils. As his wife's mother frequent ly makes her home in his hogan (aft er the custom of mothers-in-law), It requires some lively dodging to avert a catastrophe. When he returns home, after marketing his wool, or visiting the nearest trading store for a supply of tobacco, or giving chase to the nimble jackrabbit, or sojourning for a time with another wife, he gives warn ing of his approach by a loud "ki-yi," and the old lady scurries to cover, re maining out of sight as long as he Is in the neighborhood. Physically, morally and intellectual ly the Navajo is superior to other no madic tribes, such as the Utes, Apaches, Comanches, Sioux and Chey ennes. He has always been self-sup porting, receiving no rations or other THE PRIMER BY OCHWARTZ THE PICTURE LADY An-i-mal. Shape. Tall. Look at the Tall An-i-mal, Children. Is she not Tall? Oh, yes, she is very Tall—and Skin-ny; but then she has a very Up-to-date Shape. Why do you think she works in a Dime Mu-seum? Be-cause she is on-ly 18 feet Tall. Wronj?, Myr-tle! We must learn not to jump to Con-clit-sions. This E-lon-gat-ed Guin Twist-er is on-ly a Fash-ion Pic-ture of the La-dy's Fone-y Journ-al come to Life. Relaxation Needed. The household cat 18 an excellent model for the average woman to keep before her eyes, says a writer. Let women learn her secret of relaxation and they may keep the flexibility and grace of youth almost indefinitely. They can also keep their faces uulined for years''after the woman who,ls al ways in a £tate of tension has begun to mourn oyer crow's feet. Pussy has muscles of iron and terrible claws, which she can use to excellent effect when she Wants to, but when she does not want to use them the muscles are in a state of absolute relaxation and .the claws are sheathed in softest vel vet. The average woman never re |\ea either her mind or her body, fcnaLeven in sleep she is all tied up in > ioimal mid physical knots. She be < .irioft so acctlstomed to weariness that !«■' does not recognl/e It as such, CAMERON COUNTY PRESS, THURSDAY, APRIL 14, 1910. grudging assistance from the govern ment. When there is work to be had, within their capacity, the men labor willingly and efficiently, grading on the railroads, constructing irrigation reservoirs and ditches and weeding or harvesting sugar beets in the beet fields of Colorado. They cultivate their scanty patches of corn and beans on thousands of places in the desert, having been real "dry farmers" cen turies before the "Campbell system" was born of the brain of the Nebras ka experimenter, or the "dry farming congress" that meets in October In Hillings, Mont., conceived of. They build their humble hogans of stones or of timber banked up with clay, wherever there happens to be water for their flocks and herds. They are neither nomads, like the wandering tribes of the plains, nor settled agri culturists, like the Pueblos, but rather Bedouins of the American desert, moving when necessary to secure bet ter pasturage or a more abundant sup ply of water for their live stock. Their blankets, woven exclusively by their squaws, have made their tribal name a household word wherever barbaric beauty or next to everlasting durabil ity is prized. In their own field they stand alone —as far beyond the reach of rivalry as are the silken rugs of Bokhara in their sphere. and as long as she is able to stand It does not occur to her that she is tired. Society, which has heaped so many petty cares on her shoulders, is more to blame for this characteristic than she is herself, but it isn't always necessary to carry the cares about all the time nor to continue the ten sion habit after the reason for it is gone. Why? "Ridgeway boasts that he has never taken a drop of liquor in his life." "Why does he boast? I know a man who never blew out his brains, and he doesn't brag about it." The young man who has no bad habits stands the best chance of mar rying a rich man's daughter. He is less expensive to maintain as a KOB in-law than the other kind. PRACTICAL PLAN FOR CONVENIENT SHEEP RACK Device Described and Illustrated Is Such as Used bv Michigan Breeders—ls Ninety Feet Long. r 1 „,,T , A Jj . I *ii * \ /flu-. ) 'l '• \ a- a Plan of a Convenient Sheep Rack. The sheep rack described below is fuch as is used by most of the large sheep feeders of Eckford township. Calhoun county, the one mentioned being on the farm of Herman Malirle, says a writer in Michigan Farmer. The racks in this barn are 90 feet long, there being a row down each side about midway from the side to the center, leaving space enough be tween to drive through with the spreader in cleaning the barn. The ends of the mangers are open to a feed alley at each end, and the feed ing is done by walking through the mangers and scattering the grain, and from hay chutes which open to the mangers. The feeder never steps into the part where the sheep are con fined, so there is no contamination from walking in the manger. The sides of the mangers are dropped while the grain is being fed, then raised while the lambs eat it. dropped again while the hay is being placed, and raised again to allow the lambs to eat it. 1 presume the plan by which a stretch of 90 feet of gates is raised in an instant from end of manger is MODERN FARMER KEEPS POSTED Traveler Notes Interest In Pros perous and Up-to-Dute Agri cultural Community Taken in Bulletins. (By W. MILTON KELLET.) I have noted one thing in particular while traveling In several of our best agricultural states, and that is, when I see a number of well dressed farm ers discussing beef and milk rations feeding young animals for a healthy development, nitrogen, potassium and phosphorus and protein, carbohy drates and their uses and functions in plant and animal growth, I am invari ably in a prosperous and up-to-date agricultural community. Now, the question is this: Do the best and most intelligent farmers read these bulletins and keep in touch with their station workers, or does the reading of these bulletins and keeping in touch with these station workers make better and more intel ligent farmers? It is one or the other considered from either standpoint, for these bul letins are not read by the uneducated and unprogressive farmers, nor do they circulate in poor farming sec tions as freely as they do in the bet ter agricultural communities. The difficulty is that we do not fully realize or appreciate the magnificent work that many of our station work ers are accomplishing toward eleva ting the agriculture of our country. The successful station worker must be a searcher after truth and the suc DRAFT ON THE DOUBLETREE " rr^ — 112 A). i e -° re / x c==M==, B ''" (2) z 9 ' ' 112 ' 1 ■ J *• " .' V:"; = v s= 1 There is a difference of opinion among ranchers regarding the pulling ability of each horse in a team. Some are of the opinion that the horse ahead is pulling the most and vice versa. The draft on each horse depends entirely on the relative lengths of the lever arms and the lengths of the lever arms depend on the position of the clevis pins with respect to the draw pin. In upper diagram (1) the clevis pins and the draw pin are in a straight line hence the lever, arm is the perpendicular distance from the draw pjn A to the line of, draft.of horse. The lever arms in thip case are A, I! aad A, C, %hiJ5}J. .are .fecjijai, no matter how much' one' horse is the principal thing desired. I think the illustration will make this plan. It is done by means of an iron lever, fh), and sash cord, (112), fastened to the sliding board, (c). A pull on the lever raises the board, fc), to a posi tion by the side of the sationary hoard, fd), and a catch holds the lever in position, thus holding the sliding board up until the lever is released and the board drops down. Strap iron guides, (1), hold the boards in position, and as will be seen from the illustration the boards, (c), work independently of each other and are separated a little at the ends to pre vent binding. Should any do so and not drop down to place, a little work ing of the lever will start them. 1 do not remember the exact con struction of the rack, but it is some what like the illustration. Fig. 1 showing a side view and Fig. 2 the end view of one-half of the manger. The other half is similar, (a) is a post, fb) a slanting board which forms the side of the grain bottom, and (e) the slanting top to facilitate putting in the hay and help to keep chaff from falling on the necks of the lambs. cessful farmer must have a disposi tion to learn this truth and practice it in ills every day management. Efforts are just as essential on the part of the individual himself as they are upon the part of the station work ers. I suggest, therefore, that while we hold the station workers to prac tical and vigorous w.ork we farmers ourselves must consult our own Inter ests by giving careful and thoughtful consideration to all the facts that these learned men lay before us, eith er to approve and utilize or to form a basis of criticism or inquiry. Selection of the Boar. No matter how many sows are kept on the farm the selection of the boar is of great importance. There are many pure bred hogs in all parts of the country, so there is no reason for the use of a scrub boar by anyone, says the Swineherd. The character of the get of a scrub boar is guesswork, whereas with the pure bred boar there is some assur ance that his get will be uniform and of a quality indicated by his ances tors. When possible the board should be selected on the place where he waa raised. Best Pasture Grass. Among the permanent pastures composed largely of a single grass are blue, grass, Russian brome grass, Ber muda grass, buffalo grass and bunch grass. Of these Kentucky blue grass is now the most widely distributed. 11l palatability and sustaining power it stands first. It ought to be crowned king among the grasses. In favorable localities three acres of Kentucky blue grass will properly maintain a steer approaching maturity for sev en months in the year. ahead of the other. One horse al ways pulls the same amount as the other. In diagram (2) the clevis pins are behind the draw pin and when one horse pulls ahead of the other his lover arm A, C, becomes longer, and A, B, the lever arm of the one behind be comes shorter. In this case the horse ahead having a large lever arm has the advantage and pulls less than the one behind. In diagram (3) the clevis pins are ahead of the draw pin and when one horse pulls ahead his lever arm short ens and ,the ,lever arm of the.one 1 hind The. horpe ahead, hav iiljg the 'over arm shorter pulls mar* i than the horse behind. H HINDUS ALARMED AND ASTIR Spread of Christianity Threaten* Whole Structure of Hinduism With Overthrow. Hinduism Is awakening to the fact that if the great sub-stiata of Hindu society known as the depressed classes be raised by Christianity, the whole structure of Hinduism is theatened with overthrow. This awakening is being followed by efforts in various parts for the improvement of thesu poor people. The latest is a move ment in Ahrnedabad. In that city, on August 29, a meeting was held at which the attendance of the depressed classes was encouraged and in which they were allowed to sit beside caste people. Resolutions were passed for the formation of a Central Hindu asso ciation, which should have for its ob jects the raising of the depressed classes and their readmission into Hinduism after being converts to for eign faiths. As to the means to bo adopted for realizing these objects, the following suggestions were made: (a) Starting schools, clubs and asso ciations; (b) establishing preaching missions; (c) publishing papers, periodicals, magazines and leaflets; (d) adopting such other means as may be conducive to the above objects. How's This? We off*r Ono Hundred Dollar* Reward for any Otae of Catarrh that cannot be cured by llall'l Catarrh Cure. F J. CHENEY * CO.. Toledo. O. W>. the undersigned, have known ¥ I Cheney for the last 15 years, and believe him perfectly hon orable tu all business transactions and financial!/ able to carry out any obligations made by his firm. WALDING. RINNAN MARVIN. Wholesale Druggists. Toledo. O. Hall's Catarrh Cure Is taken Internally, acting llrectly upon the blood and mucous surfaces of the system. Testimonials sent free. Price 76 cent* pet bottJe. Sold by all Druggists. Take aa us Family i'llls for constipation. Futile Dissension. "So you and your husband are al ways quarreling?" said the family lawyer. "Yes," answered the young woman. "What do you quarrel about?" "I forget the subject of the first quarrel. But we have been quarreling ever since over who was to blame for it." An Ungentlemanly Reply. "Once you called me the light ol your existence." "Yes, I know it. That was before 1 had any idea you were going to be come the dead weight of it." There's more strength in a bowl of Quaker Oats i than in the same quantity or the same value of any other food you can eat. Most nourishing, least expensive. 60 Hamilton's Patent Milking Stool with Pail Holder. _. ■ : y t ■ Patented lUrrk 90, 100#. One of the most practical and simple labor saving Inventions of the ago. H«*nd one dollar for"sample stool. Agents wanted for this section. HAMILTON MI (.KING STOOL COMPANY Newport* Yt. Shoe Boils, Gapped Hock, Bursitis ARK HARD TO CL'RE, yet will remove tbem and leave no blemishes. I>OOH not bits- Afljj ßhM ter or removo the bair. Cures HMv any pull or swelling. Horse can be worked. fU.OO per bottle. I took II E free. AHSOItItINK, .111., (man kind, $1 and 12 per bottle.) ForHoils, HKi Bruises, Old Wores, Hwelllngs, Goitre, Varicose Veins, Varicosities. Allays l'ain. Yonr druggist can supply and klvo references. Will tell you more if you write. Manufactured only by W. K. YOL'.NU, 112. D. F., 810 Temple »U, b|)ring*fleld. Sui. SCHOOL LAND SALES IN MINNESOTA f5.00 and up per acre, ig% cash, 40 years time on balance at 4% interest. Buy a farm home in this prosperous state. Next sales in May and July. 1910. For particulars add. SAMUEL G. IVERSON, State Auditor, St. Paul. Minn. A Remarkable Invention NO STROPPING NO HONING KNOWN THE WORLD OVER HAIR R BALSAM JttCle»nw« and beautifies the hair, ff/fra I*romote« * luxuriant growth. v rSoNover Fails to Restore Gray YfftM Hair to Its Youthful Color. I fIHSFQ BOYS ANI> GIRLS, Send for our LMwit'j) Catalogue. Wo want to show you our l'nwuiuius. I»«»n 1 delay. Write now. SUA I KINE MKi. CO , KACUBE, N. Y. Hitvuno Cigars from factory to yu». SO.OO p« r too. Money rduuded if not buiistled. Any OIK* sending a rlubol orders will get big pieiuhmi. it e. isi;uc;i:i{, uscAslkit, I*A. n iii:THKH VOIT HAVE sio on ssio.ooo. We run iml you into ono of tho liost tliinns cvrr of fered nve toi A ire • Room LOS Haveiutysv liuih!illg, Nun Yolk City. J'"*"" I<«ea*. Ri-pauo book and r n J L J I " 'Vic- Kit UK. I'StabllsliedlHNO. i t't A UslEa a Ull|,".r.ldMu.l!ni h.ttu.hlngton.ll.C. S \ fl'nUon E.Colemnn.Wastfc » frm a h'"* nooksf.ee. in**. a m'a U a wwi r. u. 1 riiLXMc rwuiiA 3