Geo. J. Mar Furniture The Set to Set Before You li waiting for you in the shape of a nice set of crockery. We ' are now showing a splendid stock of good soun Crockery. There ! are complete sets and odd pieces. It is a great opportunity for you ! to stock up your china closet at j a little cost. Undertaking Geo. J. Laßar | Old Reliable | i Drug Store jjj Cj BARGAINS, BARGAINS, I' BARGAINS. S § Seeley's hard Rubber Trusses 1" (£ closing out at SI.OO each. s] i (n Cutlery, a fine line, closing out |{l nj at cost. W j{J regular 25c boxes pills. ™ i In None better. Closing out at n] fu 17c each. [n ! jy 100 bottles 25c size Cough and [jj ! In Cold Medicine, closing out at n] j K 17c each. There is not any Ln | J better Cough and Cold medi- ™ 1 m cine made. i{] | [}j Kalamazoo Celery Nerve and jfl I nj Blood Tonic. A tonic every- [}{ body needs in the spring of the fij In year. Closing at 65c the bottle |{] I ju Electric Bitters, one of the very nj best Stomach, Liver and Kid- f}| ' uj liey remedies. Closing out at n] ! jjj 35c each. Ln fU Skinner's Wild Cherry Tonic, !r ' J1 one of the very best appetizers. Price nj ul reduced from 50c to 30c. in I [n If your physician gives you aHi nJ prescription take it to Taggart nj and save one half on it. In L. TAGGART, Prop sHHsasHsassia£r3sasH3saj^ jij \\ e have a good assortment of 2S jjj jf Garden Tools l a kes, Hoes, Shovels, | Spading I-orks, Manure Forks, Plows 5 Harrows, Shovel Plows, jj] Sn tn n § Heavy and Shelf Hardware & S S .. i ju We solicit your patronage. C S 8 r P jjj Plumbing, Tinning:, Hot Water and [} j Steam Heating a Specialty. jj 1 F. V. HEILMAN & CO. | jfss 55355555 EsasasHs 55 Esgsß FTP Cj~P_s?c;pcn3c^»cr73E;t^3C7pc^g^ !s73 [(] laSTailoring i have removed my Tailoring estab lishment from the flat above the Ex press Oflice to the store room formerly occupied by Edw. Blinzler as a barber whop, where I now have an elegant line of patterns for Spring and Sum mer wear. All the very latest at a moderate cost. I will Rivo a DIS COUNT ON EACH SUIT sold during June, July and August. All work Guaranteed. Give me a trial. THEO. HABERSTOCK. Spring Announcement Happy Thoughts in Stylish Spring Suits, Fancy Vests, Hats, Etc. All the popular styles in Neckwear, Col lars, Pens, Gloves and Underwear. NEW—Our stock is all new, up-to-date and marked to the lowest notch. R.SEGER&CO. NEXT TO RANK. CAMERON COUNTY PRESS, THURSDAY, JUNE n, 1908 The Romance of Buried Picture*. A romantic story of a picture pur chased at a Ixiiulon auction which oil expert examination proved to lie paint ed over a kembrandt worth £B,OOO is curiously reminiscent of the discovery of a Correggio under similar circum stances. A nood many years ago two picture restorers, I,overa and Hunter spergh, bought at an art sale in Rome a number <>f old pictures in order to provide themselves with canvases for repainting. In the division of the spoils Hunterspergh received an indif ferent picture of flowers, on which lie painted a study of a head. This pic ture lie offered to Lovera, who on close examination found that the new ground Scaled off and that underneath were traces of a ligure painted in a style that denoted the hand of a mas ter. Replacing the scales and conceal ing his discovery, he purchased the picture for little more than the value of the canvas. Removing the two grounds, he disclosed an exceedingly clever painting by Correggio, which he sold to the Earl of Bristol for £1,500. Dundee Advertiser. Dogs of Luxury. The appearance of little dogs as ob jects of luxury goes back to the most ancient times. Documents are not wanting that goto show that Greek and Roman women had little dogs which were idolized by their mistress es. Even men, particularly among for eigners, were not ashamed to walk the streets of Rome with pet dogs under their anus. Speaking of this subject, Plutarch relates thai Julius Caesar, seeing or.e day in Home some strangers thus loaded with their dogs, asked them ironically whether the women of their country did not liear children. Tertia, the daughter of Lucius Aure lius Paulus, was so fond of her dog that in the moment of bidding farewell to her father, who was about to leave his country and his family to wage war against I'erseus, king of Macedo nia, she frankly admitted that the sad ness imprinted <lll her face was due to the death of her pet dog Persa. In Europe the greyhounds were the first favorites of women during the middle ages.—Boston Post. Too Much of a Good Thing. George .Marshall, a philanthropist who always kept it sharp lookout never to be wasteful, decided togo for a week's camping, taking as his guests some ragged street urchins. One morn ing lie used the bits of meat left from the evening before and made hash for breakfast. There was some left; over, Which he concluded to reheat and serve again at 110011. "Johnnie, will you have some hash?" he asked one lad. "Bet your life," replied the lad, who was constitutionally hungry. "Peter, pass your plate for some hash"—to another freckled nosed lad. "Not if 1 knows it,"was the unex pected reply. "I thought you liked hash from the way you ate it this morning," replied Mr. Marshall. "I did like it for breakfast," said the lad, "but none of yer review of re views for me for dinner."—Lippincott's Magazine. Sided With Father. "There is a little chap in our town," said the suburbanite, "whose father and mother have words quite frequent ly, and have them loud enough to be heard by the neighbors. The burden of their recriminations when audible is, on the wife's part, that she ever lowered the Hicks family sufficiently to marry a Stubbs, and 011 his part that he ever honored the Hicks fam ily by allying it with the house of Stubbs. "One day last summer the young sou of the house went fishing. He had barely got his line into the brook when he heard bis mother calling him. "'There it is,' said he disgustedly; 'the minute the Stubbses begin to fish the Ilickses begin to holler.' "—Cleve land Plain Dealer. A Lesson In Thrift. A lesson in thrift is found in the ad vice given by Congressman John E. Andrus to a young man for whom he had secured a minor appointment in the capltol at Washington. Meeting the young fellow in the capitol, he placed a hand 011 his shoulder and re marked: "William, you are just beginning your life. Let me give you a bit of sound advice: When you leave your boarding house in the morning never take more than 30 cents in your pock ets, enough perhaps for your luncheon and for car fare. You will then not be tempted to spend more than you ran afford."—Yonkers Statesman. — Unchanging Man. Mortal man offers but little difference in. spite of the diversity of race and climate, and in analyzing the Egyptian Ave almost find ourselves reproduced. Intellectual man also manifests a sin gular identity of aspiration and belief from the Nile to the Ganges and from the Eurotas to the Arno.—Mercure de France. Some Grains of Luck. "Is your husband having any luck at the race track?" "Some luck," answered young Mrs. Torklns. "He hasn't caught cold nor had his pockets picked."—Washington Star, A True Patriot. "Johnny, what's a patriot?" "A boy who'd rudder miss seein' de game dan go in 011 a ball knocked over de feuce by de visitin' team."—Louis ville Courier-Journal. Not Entirely One. "And so they were made one." "Oil, I don't know.l believe she still lias a mind of her own." Costly Jar of the Subway. The tuppenny tube, London's sub way, once set lire to a house in a man ner so extraordinary as to merit atten tion. in a mansion beneath which runs the subterranean railway one of the bedroom fireplaces was fitted with a blower—a sheet of iron inside the grate which can be raised or lowered to regulate the draft. The blower rest ed 011 a series of iron notches. One afternoon a servant kindled a lire in the grate and when it was well alight raised the blower, so that the coal would burn but slowly, and so left it while she went downstairs. Presently, deep in the clay beneath the foundiv tions of the house, a train rushed along. The vibrations from its passing were sufficient to jar the blower from the notches on which the servant had left it. It dropped down. The draft in creased; the tire raged madly. The llames were enough to set the chimney 011 lire, burning soot set the water tank 011 the roof alight, and there resulted a considerable conflagration.—Pittsburg Post. A Girl and a Snake. It is a matter of fact that men have greater fear of serpents than have wo meu. During a visit to friends in the country I was crossing a stretch of meadow in the company of my hostess' daughter, a sprightly girl of seventeen, when a black snake crossed the path ten feet in front of 11s. 1 caught my companion by the sleeve, but she wrenched herself loose, gathered her skirts about her knees, gave a running jump and landed squarely upon the back of the reptile. His snakeship thrashed the grass and the girl's ankles with equal futility. As soon as she could disengage one foot she planted it upon the serpent's head. In the ab sence of club or stones I was com pelled to stand and witness a scene that to me was terrifying, but to the girl furnished supreme enjoyment. Years afterward when I read Hag gard's description of Jess' light with the kangaroo I understood the kind of entertainment that my young compan ion had provided for me.—Brooklyn Eagle. There's a Hare In the Moon. Equally famous with the 1111111 in the moon and the woman in the moon is the hare in the moon, says Garrett I'. Serviss in Ills "Astronomy With the Naked Eye." The original is a Bud dhist legend. The god Sakkria, dis guised as a Brahman, pretended to lie starving and went to the animals for help. The monkey got him a bunch of mangoes; the coot picked up a fisher man's neglected string for him; the fox stole him a pot of milk. At last the god approached the hare. "I have nothing but grass," said the hare, "and you can't eat that." "But your flesh is good," suggested the pretended Brah man. The hare assented. "Then," said the Brahman, "I'll kindle a fire at the foot of this rock, and you jump off into it. That'll save me the trouble of kill ing you." The hare assented again, but as he leaped from the rock the god caught him in his arms and then drew his figure in the moon as a perpetual reminder of the excellence of self sac rifice. Cerebral Embolism. Cerebral embolism, or the occlusion or plugging of an artery in the brain, causes sudden death. Growths or veg etations form 011 the valves of the heart. While attached they are harm less, but the instant one, large or small, becomes loosened and enters the rapid arterial current a very perilous condi tion obtains. The embolus, or plug, enters a vessel that becomes narrower and narrower and at last it is arrested and occludes or plugs the artery, there by cutting off tin; blood supply. The force of the blood current back of the embolus keeps it at the seat of arrest. In bruin cases the middle cerebral ar tery, at the base of the brain, is af fected. Once lodged unconsciousness follows and soon death. Some of the symptoms resemble those of a true cerebral hemorrhage or apoplexy.— New York Herald. A Quaint English Ceremony. On the last day of each October the city solicitor of London, with an as sistant, attends upon the royal remem brancer, when by proclamation "the tenants and occupiers of a piece of waste ground called the inoors, in the county of Salop," are commanded to "come forth and do your service upon pain and peril that shall fall thereon." The solicitor chops in halves two fag ots, one with a hatchet anil the other with a billhook. Afterward conies the summons to the tenants, etc., of "a certain tenement with a forge" in the Strand and the payment of six horse shoes, vHtli sixty-one shoe nails, by the solicitor. This forge has long ceased to be, and the same shoes and nails are used year after year, the shoes be ing at least two centuries old. Spell This. Some of you who think you are well up in spelling Just try to spoil the words in this little sentence: "It is agreeable to .vitness the un paralleled ecstasy of two harassed ped dlers endeavoring to gauge the sym metry of two peeled pears." Itead it over to your friends and see how many of them can suell every word correctly. The sentence contains some of the real puzzlers of the spell ing book. Too Good a Chance to Miss. He (indignantly)— They have put us in a back pew this morning. Why, I wonder? She (calmly)— They probably noticed that I wore a dowdy hat and that I shouldn't care to have it seen! There is a saying that people are ;>s "homely as a mud fence." Did a-iv one ever see « miul fence or know if there is sii'-lt ;i thli'g?- Atchison Globe. A BEAUTIFUL FACE " I slug If you have pimples, blotches, or other akin Imperfections, you w. remove them and have a clear and beautiful complexion by uring BEAUTYSKIN W• ;. Jl !l Makes Hew*'' J> y Removes bkin Imperfections. Beneficial results guaranteed W or money refunded. \ L* •Send Ht amp for Free Sample, \ yf ; Particulars and Testimonials. v -- Mention this paper. After Using. *"■'° OCH ESTER CHEMICAL CO., Madison Place, Philadelphia, Pa. f^" v VVAAAAAA^VVVVVVVVVVVVV We promptly obtain U. 8. and Foreign } 8583E; «J Send model, sketch or photo of invention for 112 <* freereport on patentability. For free book, C j Patents and TTTTTTfiI I WINDSOR HOTEL W. T. BRUBAKER, Manager Midwny between : Broad St. Station and Reading Terminal on Filbert St. A convenient and homelike place to stay while in the city shopping. An excellent restaurant where gocdser vice combines'with low prices. Rooms sl,llO per day and upwards. The only moderate priced, IIUICI of repu tation and consequence in Philadelphia, Pa. HHnMBMHanHBHnBOHEBHB Business Cards. J. C. JOHNSON, j p. MC^ARNKY F. A. JOHNSON. JOHNSON & McNAKNEY, A TTO RNEYS-AT-LAW EMPORIUM, PA. Will give prompt attention to all business en trusted to them. 16-ly. MICHAEL BRENNAN, _ ~ ATTORNEY-AT-LAW Collections promptly attended to. Real estate ano pension claim agent, ">-ly. Emporium, Pa. B. W. GREEN. JAY P. FELT GREEN & FELT, ATTOR N EYS-AT- LA W, Corner Fourth and Broad streets, Emporium, Pa. All business relatingto estate,collections.real estate. Orphan's Court and general lav business will receive prompt attention. 41-25-ly. COMMERCIAL HOTEL, Near P. & E. Depot. Emporium. Pa. n , . F . R S UI i R IC' K LEVECKE, Prop'r. Centrally located. Every convenience for the traveling public. Rates reasonable. A share of lie public patronage solicited. ,14j y MAY GOULD, TEACHER OP /'ANO, HARMONY AND THEORY, Also dealer 111 all the Popular .sheet Music Emporium, Pa. Scholars; taught either at my home on Sixth street or at the homes of the pupils. Out oftown scholars will be given dates at my roomdn this place. | ALWAYS GLAD TO SEE YOU! # I HERE? 1 C. B. HOWARD & CO'S if General Store, U WEST END of fourth street, emporium, pa. I NOTICE. I 111 Strictly pure goods. Conform with the pure food isf |l|!; law in our Grocery Department. All firms are required 'M. || to Rive us a guarantee 011 their invoices. I GROCERIES. Ip i'tdl line of all canned goods: Tomatoes, Peaches, Mil gji Pears, Cherries, Corn, Meats of all kinds. Our line of pj |V.J, Cookies and Crackers cannot be surpassed for freshness, iM] H! get them every week or two. Sour and sweet pickles k4' Jt b y the d °zen or bottle. Fish of all kind. Cannot be M beat 011 No. 1, sun Mackerel. Hams, Shoulders, |ijj|| |m| Paeon and Salt Pork or anything you desire in the line. Sri CLOTHING, ®j Complete line of Underwear in Ballbriggan, natur- ijllj al wool and fleece lined, Shirts and Drawers, Overalls, ffffj ® Pants, Dreps Shirts, work Shirts, Over Jackets, wool fl m} and cotton Socks, Gloves, Mittens, etc. I SHOES AND RUBBERS. | j|ml| Have all sizes to suit the trade, for ladies, men, iJIt >|| boys and children. jM'l § DRESS GOODS. || 10 Anything in the line you desire. Come look our gj stock over. ||| | HARDWARE. jR Shovels, Picks, Hinges, Screws, Hammers, Hatch- f|' |g ets, Axes, all kinds, Handles and nails, from a shoe !§[ Mj nail to a boat spike. !||; | CONCLUSION. | J& We appreciate your past patronage and shall en- |lii Iffli eavor give you the same service and same goods in ® the future as in the past. Phone orders receive our |§| (Ml piompt attention and delivered promptlv bv our popu- Mi' ||| lar drayman Jake. Yours truly pj' - C. B. HOWARD & CO Sour Stomach No appetite, loss of strength, nervous ness, headache, constipation, bad breath, general debility, sour risings, and catarrh of the stomach are all due to indigestion. Kodol relieves Indigestion, This new discov ery represents the natural Juices of diges tion as they exist In a healthy stomacji, combined with tfri greatest known tanlo and reconstructive properties. Kodol for dyspepsia does not only relieve Indigestion and dyspepsia, but this famous remedy helps all stomach troubles by cleanslnfe, purifying, sweetening and strengthening the mucous membranes lining the stomach. Mr. S. S. Ball, of Ravenswood, W, Vs., says:— ' I was troubled with sour stomach for twenty years. Kodol cured me and wo are now uslne It In milk lor baby," Kodol Digests What You Eat. Bottles only. Relieves Indleestlon, *our stomach. belching of gas, etc. Prepared by E. O. DeWITT & CO., CHIOAQO. Sold by R. C. Dodson. COUDERSPORT & PORT ALLEGANY R. R. Taking effect April 22. 1908. EASTWARD _ I ' I 12:4 120 STATIONS. 1 J_L „ . ... A. M. P. M. A.M. Port Allegany,.. Lv. 11 37 7 12 H 00 Chemical Works.... oo oo ; co Burtville, 11 47 7 22, 8 17 Koulette U 65 7 30 H 50 Knowlton's, 11 59 00 ' «• Mina, 12 05 7 40 !l 10 Olmsted, 1? 09 »7 4! cc _ , rAr 12 17 752 025 Coudersport. •' f'/ A. M 1 ' v ' 000 12 25 i North Coudersport, 00 ... ,*\2W, Frink's, »6 io *l2 35 Colesbnrg H 17 12 4.1 Seven Bridges, »(i 22 *l2 47 Raymonds 6 32 12 57 Gold, 6 37 1 02 Newlield, °° 1 Ofi NewtieldJunction,.. 0 47 1 15 !.. Perkins »B 50 »1 IS Carpenter's, 00 ..... »i 22 Crowel'.'s »6 56 «l 25 Ulysses 7 05 1 35 A.M. P. M. WESTWARD. 1 ' 6 STATIONS. A.M. P. M. PoitAllegany, !l io 4 55 Chemical works.... 00 oo Burtville 8 57 4 42 Roulette i 8 50 4 Sii Knowlton's, *4 30 Mina 8 40 4 25 Olmsted, «8 35 4 20 I Lv. 8 30 4 16 Coudersport, .. I P. M. ( Ar 8 25 I North Coudersport, 00 3 45 Frink's «8 13 3 38 Colesburg »8 06 3 31 Seven Bridges, »8 02 3 24 Raymond's »7 52 »3 20 2 oU Vm 7 48 1 *8 10 Newneld "7 41 *3 C 6 Newfield Junction, 7 10. ! 2 58 Perkins *7 33 «2 44 Carpenter's : «7 30 «2 4o CroweU's »7 27 n 37 Plyw Lv.l I 7 20, 2 80 Trains 1 and 2 run daily between Couders port and Port Allegany, all other trains run week days only. • Flag stations. (°°) Trains do not stop T Telegraph offices. Trains run on Eastern Standard Time. Connections—At Uiysseswith Fall Brook R'y for points north and south. At B. <fc S. June lion with Buffalo & Susquehannaß. R. north !'or Wellsville, south for Oaleton and Addison. At Port Allegany with Pennsylvania R. R., north for Runalo, Olean, Bradford and Smetliport; south for Keating Summit, Austin. Emporium and Penn'a R. It., points. B. A. McCLURE, Gen'lSupt. Coudersport, Pa.
Significant historical Pennsylvania newspapers