ESTABLISHED, 1860. I Cameron County Press HKNRY 11. MUIJMK, liditoi am! Proprietor OltviLLK PRO LTD FOOT, Assistant and Manager RAYMOND KLUUS, Assistant Foreman. W. BCOTT STERNER, Assistant Local Editor. PIJBLTSUBL) KVKRY THURSDAY Council Proceedings. Regular meeting Borough Council, snporlum, March 7, 1910, Present: If yfi- rti. Haupt, Norris, Pearsall, How ard, Foster, Cummitiga, Mumford and RiMtiull. Absent: Mr. Spencer. Mr. Haupt nud Mr. Norris prt ent «d their credentials and were duly ac « '■ !. members of Council. < i ui': i.i-j by Mr. Howard, .seconded ift i. Mumford, Mr. Rishell wan e! ; :■-! naporary Chairman. Oil motion by Mr. Howard, second ed by .',r. Norria, 11. C. More was «••• i temporary Secvtarv. Mov d by Mr. Cummings, seconded is\ Mr. Norris that M.'"tin Foster bo <c! i President ofthe Council for en «uing year. Carried. ■.d by 'r. Pearsall, seconded by TV Howard, that R. 0. More be elect- Secretary' of Council for ensuing tj < nr. C irried. Mowdbv Mr. Mumford, seconded Mr. Toward, that K D. White be «•;' ! rorougn Treat irer for ensuing ar. Carried. Message from Burgess was read in <wh ; ch the Bur -ess suggested that the Council separate the work of the Pol ic:o Department from that of Street C.< m >ner and Mr Howard moved, #»( •!>nd« t by Mr. Mumford. that Frank JMundy be elected Chief of Police for enHtiiii!. . . ar with salary to be fixed at next regular meeting of Council and t?. it t tie appointment of Street Coin- bo held over until next v jular meeting of the Council. Car- STH < i. Moved bv Mr. Howard, and second ed by Mr. Pearsall, that Secretary and T 1 easurtr'a salaries be made the same ar, last year and that Borough pay Treasurer's bond Carried. Moved by Mr. Norris, seconded by D iford, fhat the order of busi u softl OouftcU be the same as order of business of previous Council ai d that the regular meeting night of <£ .uncd he the first Monday in each month at 7:30 P. '«!. Carried. Mintit 112 of hint meeting read and ap proved. ' iie bills w.-re read and Mr. Howard .Lived, seconded by Mr. Cummings, fb it the following bi'is as read be paid, i r; : I)an Siiugart, .wort: on ."treets, $lO 60 £.<bt. n >ir on do (to 10 00 Jimm • Wagner do <lo 13 0q ■tohael Mulcaby, <lo do I 00 Jo'un Parrel do ...do 200 Jlvigelo Jenako, do do 1 00 Ciyda Th' mas do do 80 J uri !>avin, do do 300 Cbarloa Heorld do do 2 00 John Welsh, <'o do 2 CO Oils Whitmer, Poiice Servici 4 00 X»-H & Co Invoice 1 30 St-'pheiis Hardware C0.,..d0 4 93 {Emporium Machine Co., . .do 1 SO E > v He, i>« ; «l F.xni't.is bills and Salary, 81 30 H More, Invoice, Salary und Stumps,.., 77 25 St. Marys Gas Co., (?as for February 23 Cj C '.u Arn'aturc Works, invoice, (2) 11 10 Doubleday-UUi Eli-o. Co., invoice, (1) 44 41 No\e!tj Incundcsceut L. Co,, invoice B 13 'f>ar ;1 ;fct i and I'n tsiirer's report read and ordered filed, amounts as follows: receipts for February, $4.1 45; expeo* idr.uv a for Fob uar>, $583 57; balance <£.. ti.imi ; < hru.iry 28111, S2.SCO 45. A petition r r->:u property owners on Broad and Second streets was read in gregard to the Old Dam and Log Boom «fC. B Howard Companv and Mr. 1 ford moved, seconded by Mr. Howard, that petition bt laid over nn ttl next meeting of Council Carried. ioved by .Mr. Ho*ar;', -> : -.'iided by T . Kisheli, that inn u-, of-idewalk in fr ... of property of Geo 11. Spring bo x ferved to Borough Attorney. Car v ivu'l by .Mr. Howard, seconded by fill' Mumford, tbut matti-r of ditch in #ro"t of property of Henry Robinson ft. • i't . red to Street Committee. Car jt'-kI Moved by Mr. Howard, seconded by TJ'i*. Pe:tr.-all, that m.:' < r of pipe to be A i.i on ,;ro; erty- <f Wrn Hoot be r<;- uKrcr. t > Street Commit fee! Council (Chun adjourned. Carried. R. C. MOORE, Sec'y. SWI.DIHII SERVICE Rev. b. >• on of Rigdgway, will preach to-aiorrov/, Friday evening, at o'oln. . the residence of Mr. and Mm. 5 . 'J. Exstrom, on Sixth str» e.. Loi. ...i "tir Sivedi;ih people, in this H'etion, come and listen to the word of Co;] and decide about the future. ID ;.11, case of stumuuh ,i iuble, due to iudig<.'£tinn or dyspcsi i y> a may feel sure that Kndol will u'v yitt relie* This is what K 'doi is for* l.i uifieM:, the IV'Otl flint \iai cat and docs ■?x eoiupli'tely. it is fold i>) all druggistK. Chaiuberluin's Stomach and Liver Tab- Si!t- iu\ iriably brings relad in women su(- Ss- :.r. i'r-iiu elir.'iii.- constipation, hcad in*, hiliiiu-!tie , dizzin >. • illowness of •tiit; skin and dyspi pnia Sold by al! /dealer*. Buy Your Happiness. You can't be happ) n jam don't feel .like it Hut, if you d n't feel like it, ran buy Sexino I'll - and thus re aiiWii your shattered nerves. Sexine FAki are guaranteed 112 r nervous men :a;Ki woujen. 81a box ; fix boxes 85, (with full yuaratitee, Addre-s or call on l K C Uodson, iJrii}jui-t. Koiporium, Pa., <?!>« re they sell all the principal remedies M'd do uot substitute. F".- 0,1- rfix ocutve Story & (.'larit Organ. v d conditiop, »t. h >. '> o:iin. PltANlv HALDERMAN, 2-tf. East Fifth St., Emporium, Pa. Standard Oil. Continuer. from Ist page organized by the Standard directly, but some of them were bought up, and their active managers retained on sal aries. A few were organized for the purpose of pcllinf.;' out to tho Standard. This decentralization is one of the chief reasons for the success of the Standard, it is on the order of the modern department-store, which is merely fifty, sixty or seventy stores in one, each under a competent general manager. Every department has its own complete system of bookkeeping, and must make a profit, or show a reason why. In the old way of merchandising, the life of a successful business was twenty years, then it went broke. There were leaks that could not. be lo cated, dead stock, dead wood, dead men who thought that they were alive, salesmen in a comotoso state, extrava gant buyers, and lime in the bones of the boss. The law of diminishing re turns wrecks every big venture that is not decentralized, that is, divided up into water-tight compartments, so if one springs a leak all the damage that is done is to flood that particular de partment. The ship still floats. The General Electric Company has recently begun to decentralize, and so have most of the other big corpora tions. And all of these are simply fol lowing the lead of the Standard Oil Company. ITS MAUVELOL'S ORGANIZATION: As an organization, The Standard Oil Company is equaled by only one other institution on Earth—and I'll not tell you what that one is. If you do not know, the mattej would not in terest you, anyway. The success of the Standard Oil Company has turned on its selection of men and its service to the public, and not on its strength of capital. The capital came as a result—it was an in cident. The men who manage The Standard Oil Company at one time had no capital—they did, however, have brains and energy. "All wealth is a result of labor, applied to land," says Adam Smith. Later he added capital as a factor in the production of wealth. Modern economists add a fourth factor, and this is the most im portant of all—it is Enterprise. The French call it the service of the Entre preneur. Ida Tarbell surely tells one great truth. It is this:"Even the elevator boys in the Standard Oil offices are selected with an idea to their develop ment.'' THE RESULT OF COMPETITION. The position of the The Standard Oil Company in the commercial world, is the result of competition. It is the natural result of a commercial struggle for existence. It is tho survival of the fittest. People who hate a monoply should reverence The Standard Oil Company For the men who manage The Standard Oil Company %vent into a free-for-all field, and won their way to fortune with exactly the same tools and weapons that all their competitors had. In this fight for btisines-s there was no favors asked nor given. And the battle was fought according to the established rules of the game. They have done to their competitors what their competitors were trying to do to them. Often after the fight these competitor;! found themselves with money enough to live on in ease tho rest of their days. Retired oil mer chants living in easy affluence in many sections are thick as fleas on a dog one result of Standard Oil rapacity. THE NEW BUSINESS ETHICS. Practically, the world has been made over within twenty years' time, and we have now a new business ethic. The error of some reformers is to try a man, according to present-day stand ars, for offences committed in Eight een Hundred Eighty-five. In that year I well recall how the firm for which I worked had a ship ment of heavy chemicals arrive on the docks in New York frora Liverpool. The goods had not been removed from tho lighters before wo had bids from three different railroads and two canal lines to transport the shipments to Buffalo. The reduced bids came in the form of rebates for "cartage," "commissions," "lighterage," or "dockage." There was a strife for traffic and the company that gave the biggest rebate got the business. We bought in the lowest market, and sold in the highest. The railroads have but one thing to sell and that is transportation. All railroads then sold their transportation for as much as they could, and took what they had to Everj body bought 'scalpers' tickets, except those who rode on passes. I rode on passes, first because I was a big shipper, and the rule of the times was that the big shippers must be fav ored. Later, I rode on passes because I pushed what you call "a virile pen"— and admitted it. Reduced to simple terms, it was this: I wrote so well that I molded public opinion, and thus had the power to injure the railroads. Therefore I was retained, as it were, by these base monopolies,and supplied transportation. We called it"the courtesies of the road." I rode on passes until January First, Nineteen Hundred Seven. Did I then turn in my passes? Ob, no! The passes were taken away CAMERON COUNTY PRESS, THURSDAY, MARCH 10, 1910. from me—and they nearly had to give !me ether to do it. Now, I pay my faro and am proud of it, if not a little boastful. MAKE-UP THE STANDARD. The Standard Oil Company is made up of graduates of the University of Hard Knocks. They have played the j game accordi g to regulation Ameri ! can rules, and they have won because 1 thov had the foresight, patience, quick l liesH, courage, good cheer, economy, ; skill. The men who went down be fore them failed for lack <■!' these American qualities -these qualities in culcated in our public schools, extolled in books, preached in sermons—the qualities that have made Americans supreme whereover they have had a fair field The American invasion haw been carried even to that dear Ol' Lun non, whose under..'round rail win :t have been rendered light, airy and safe through being electrified by Arm - ican push, pluck and perseverance. Now, Americans as a people are fair—or least we wish to be fair. When we judge Moses and Aaron we judge them according to the times in which they lived. And when the Great Ag nostic wrote a lecture on the "Mis takes of Moses" we resented the prop osition that Moses was a rogue and robber because ho made war on the Hittites, Ammonites and Midianitrs We invoked the statute of limiatio; * by saying that these things happen ed over three thousand years ago, he sides, did not Moses lead the Children of Israel out of captivity? That is to say, we point to the Ten Commandments and the moral code of Moses and all the good he did as a set-off to deeds doubtful according to present-day standards Moreover, we refuse to abandon the history of Moses as written by himself and bis friends, and accept that of the disciples of Gog and Magog. VILIFICATION KAMPANT. Up to this time, or until very re cently, The Standard Oil Company iias declined to answer its assailants. Its managers have been so busy doing things that tlioy have bad no time to shake the red flag of wordy warfare. Their faith has been that their work would speak for itself. Usually, I bis is a wise policy, but in this instance I think it has been a mistaken one. Si lence has been construed into a plea of guilt. There is a time to speak and a time to refrain from speaking, says Eeciesi astes. The Standard Oil Company should have nailed a few of the Ida Tarbell fairy-tales, ten years ago. Ida Tarbell is not a charter member of the Ananias club—she is worse than j that—she is an honest, bitter, talented i and prejudiced person who wrote from her own point of view. And that view ! is from the ditch, where her father's wheelbarrow was landed by a Stand ard Oil tank-wagon. To understand her book, it is not enough to read it—you must have a glympse of the author. Ida Tarbell has twenty-three pictures of John D Rockefeller in her book, but none of herself. Her own history is written between the lines, and her picture is on the fly-leaves. She shot from cover, and she shot to kill. Such literary bushwhackers should be answered shot foi .site.t. Sniping the commercial caravan may be legitimate, but to my mind the Tar bell-Steffens-Russell-Roosevelt-Sinclair method of inky warfare is quite as un ethical tis the alleged tentacled-dragon policy which they attack There is a life of George Washington written by a Cockney who was born within sound of Bow Bells and was never farther away from Charing Cross than Hammersmith. Wo call Wash ington the "Father of his Country," but this man calls him"arcli-flend" and "a bloody, blooming rebel." Recently, a man picked out of a file of the New York "Tribune" one hun dred editorials on Lincoln. The intent was to reprint the Greeley editorials as a literary curiosity, but no publisher could be found with stomach to stand for the joke—it was sickening. Yet, Greeley was an honest man. llis at tacks on Lincoln, like those on Wen dell Phillips, represent a point of view, and a point of view which we now see was out of focus. Ida Tarbell is a great woman, but if she were to write my life, I'd take hers—with apoligies to Ursa Major. She might tell in truth of how I stole watermelons, turned the cows into the corn, because I lrad a tiff with the own- | er's daughter—sold a rail-road pass, j rode on the bumpers, gave a false j name to a policeman who had curios- I ity plus, made fun of my grandmother, j and put a Smallpox sign on old Massa- ; chusetts Hall in Harvard Yard. Of course, that does'nt exhaust the j list—there is still more to be told, which my kind neighbors will supply. . A man's friends never quite know j all about him —they never fully analyze i him. To know all about a person is j the pleasing assumption of hisenimies. J THE SQUARE DEAL. Now, in the interests of the Square Deal, that thing of which we hoar so much and see so little, if you tell of my faults and lapses, you should also tell of the good I have don" T f t>" Mr-lt wagon bumps into a wneeibarrow, you ought to give me the benefit of letting me tell where I was going and how the accident happened. Perhaps I was on the right side of the ro d going carefully, and the wheelbarrow may have been exceeding the speed limit— who knows! A man in England once said to me: i -'O, what a pity that Rockefeller rob ! bed and ruined tho oil country the ; destitution must be terrible!" The man had bean reading Ida Tar bell. Then J had to tell my friend that, while I didn't know much about John i ]). Rockefeller, 1 was familiar with the | oil country, and I knew that, since The Standard Oil Company bad got a-going, th re bad been a steady j growth of prosperity in the oil coun trv, where before there was the fear of uncertainty, and all the doubt that disturbs, distresses and dissolves 1 told him that The Standard Oil Com pany was not made up of gamblers— ! ihey were miners, product rs, dis! ribu : 'ors and creators. Titusviile, Oil City, Corry, Franklin, ! Olean ar« beautiful and growing cities wh«re peace and plenty are the rule— I cities of homes, schools, churches, I stores, opera-homes, libraries—where I go. d things were to be found in an abundance and to a degree never j before knowrf. Also, 1 told him that wherever the Standard Oil went it carried system, or.ler, safety, prosperity; arid that it . ill. wage beyond-its competitors, even beyond "Union Scale," and ab sorbed the best and strongest, into its ranks; that The Standard Oil Com pany met its obligations, never de faulted on its payroll, and supplied the world a high quality of goods at prices which were regarded as reason able and right Its offense lay in the fact that it had . ucceeded; arid through the inappre ciation and'lack of understanding as to what a tremendously rich and boun tiful country this is in which we live. WHAT 18 HISTORY? Ot;e of the greatest books ever writ ten by mortal man is Thomas Henry iiuckle's "History of Civilization." Buckle never got beyond the intro duction, which forms a volume in it self, and is immortal on account of its wealth of logic and clearness of insight. The whole volume is a protest against ! the way in which history has been | written— -a protest against the assump tion that military history, a history of inarches and countermarches, of skir iniabes and fights, of sieges and slaughters, is history at all. Certainly it is not the history of the life and evolution of a people. That which makea or unmakes a nation is the quiet, peaceful, productive life of the people. Nations are great through their architects, engineers, artists, teachers, business men and workers, and not through their lawyers, preach ers iind policemen. It is commerce—production and dis tribution—that has given America her proud place among the nations, not lawsuits. Our supremacy lies in the one fact that "we have produced the goods." And yet in reading Ida Tar bell. you find thirty-six pages given to an account of a lawsuit with an out come comparatively trivial in any event, and in vhich, as in most law suits, all parlies lost out to the lawyers Jaggers was the only man who won. To read Tarbell is to read history milit. Nt, as if r othingreally happened ill Ameri' • between the time Jackson beat the British in Eighteen Hundred Twelve at New Orleans and tho time Sumpter was fired upon in Eighteen Hundred Sixty-one. The Tarbell history is a history of strife, of bickerings, of misunderstand inus, of lawsuits—an infinites! z he, sez she, and sez I. It is over-the-back feiico goß&ip, raised to fortissimo. For instance, tho author cites Com modore Vanderbilt as authority con cerning tho genius of John D. Rocke feller ant! his partners. She should first have read "Moore on Facts," wherein the credibility of witnesses is treated at great length. There she whould have learned that, when she quotes Commodore Vanderbilt, in jus tice to the jury she should have stated that when Vanderbilt gave his testi mony ho was eighty-three years old, and moreover was talking of a man he had never met, and of a business con cerning which be knew nothing. She should also have told that, even in his best days, Vanderbilt was of a most vio lent and prejudiced nature. Moore says that Pontius Pilate and Caiaphas were both good men, but unsafe, unreliable and incou-.peteut as witnesses. COMMERCIAL SANITY. This country has just passed through a cyclone of defamation, vituperation and exposure—much of it ind. cent. V\ e have been in a state of panic through the policy of burning our barns to kill the mice. The natioual condition has been pathologic. We are recovering our sanity. The commercial jolt we have experienced, has shown us that when the railroads are prosperous—buying rails, extend ing lines, building bridges, warehous es, collecting a better equipment—we are all prosperous. When the rail roads cease pushing for better facili ties, riinre is a lull, the bread-line forms, the tramp of the unemployed and the hoarse and omnious roar of mob are hoird in the land. In such times, an extra police force is needed j and menace becomes imminent. Individuals at work are safe—and a nation is only safe when its people are | employed. Now suppose you raise a cry of "Stop j thief," and I urn the powerful resour j ces of the government to harassing en . terprise with the endeavor to confis , catr 1 i;t property, takeaway itseharae ; ter, det.troy its good-will, dot sit not | stand to reason that we thus kit l am- I bition, (:i-'slri;j initla'ive. smothor as piration, and ; ta ooiuliii • ■ winl:')ex pansion censes, orders aro cut.celled, men laid off, s<d the whole land Gutt ers. L'appily, however, wo are now getting our rerves bac': 1 1 norm, nod sanity will soon take tho place of by steris. We do business now according to Marquis of Queensbcrry Rules, when : formerly London Rules governed the contest. Our fight is with six-ouuce | glovi -p. Horseshoes and railroad j spikes are birred. There was a time 1 when we fought with bared knuckles. ! But business is not. yet a ladies'lunch - ■ a suaveand inuuoeuous, harmless, tab jby Four-o'clock. It is a struggle for j supremacy. And it is a fight to a | finish And it i just as full of ru [ mance as wore the knightly jousts of old THS UTILITY OF WEALTH. Money is the measure of power, but money for its own sake is not worth the struggle. Modern millionaires do not hoard- they invest. And they invest that they may use. The successful man now always has the builder's itch —be is always and forever widening, extending, building, improving, and it is all in the line of human service, human betterment. To exploit society is to fail, and \vi e, successful men know it Nothing is morcsiU.y and absurd than the idea that tlie men who have built up the great modern American fortunes are intent 011 ease and luxury. As a class they are men of abstemious habits, simple, rapid and direct in their dealings. They work sixteen hours a day. They are in the game and can't get out of it if they would. Their mil lions are invested in a way that makes use an imperative necessity. To liqui date would be red ruin. "They say I am rich," once said James J. Hill to me, "and the yellows roll oil'the num ber of my millions. The fact is, I owe more money than all the men in Minn esota. To make my investments profitable and to keep them from fad ing away, I am obliged eternally to struggle keeping them active." One investment calls for another to protect it; so Mr. Hill is ever building, ever extending. This eternal unrest of business means national prosperity. CONFIDENCE AND BUSINESS STABILITY. The habit of certain newspapers of trying to inspire class hatred by pictur ing the great business-builder as a parasite, living on the labor of the proletariat, is an insult to the intelli gence of the age. Should our Government begin to confiscate private property intbename of the law, that instant will enterprise grow old, and senility prate of the past. But this is not to be. We are beginning to realize that business is built on confidence, that when we destroy faith in our commer cial fabric we are actually taking the roofs from homes, snatching food from children, and pushing bodies naked out into the storm. Business means homes, gardens, books, parks, music, good roads, school—safety, peace and prosperty—and of these things the world has not yet seen a plethora. Shall we blast, wither and destroy with the breath of our mouths all that civil ization holds dear? 1 think not. We can direct and regulate, but we will do it in justice and not in blindness and wrath, lest we welcome the angels of peace with bloody hands to hospitable graves, and wo ourselves go down in the sunken roadway, horse and rider, pursuer and pursued.—Elbert Hubbard in the Fra. OUT OF THE GLOOM. riany a Gloomy Countenance in Em porium Now Lightens With Happiness. A bad back makes you gloomy. Coo t be happy with continual back ache. The aches and pains of a back are mostly due to sick kidneys. Doan's Kidney Pills cure sick kidneys. They have made many a happy home in Emporium. Read what a grateful citizen sys : W. 15. Krebs, Allegany Ave., Em porium, I\»., says: "About seven years ago I was in bad shape with kidney and bladder trouble and one physician told me I had diabites. I doctored fur over a year, hut no be'<efit resulted and 1 be came discouraged V.''en almost ready in give up, a friciii' told iLn of Uoau's Kidu- y Pills and 1 procured a supply. The c.intents of three boxes cured me ami i h«'tv has !i "i no symptom of my ! trouble since For sal<- by all dealers. Price al> cents. \ Foster-Mi.burn lY>, Buffalo, Nov Yo:>», | sole agents limn tuber the riaint—\ Doun'.v —uud take no other. Cedar Shingles $4.50 per thousand at j B. Howard & Co's. Birthday Party. Wednenday evening, March 2d, a genuine surprise was given Miss Vera Tanner, of Mason Hill, it being her 17th birthday. Thirteen of her young friends took it into their heads to give this deserving and excellent young lady a surprise and it •.<?«* i -»re it suc cess. Just Mm family were about, to retire a rap at (he <!o->r aroused the family arid in wulkf'd the following young friends, beaded liy Aiiss Neilie M>iis! : M(-mm. Maurice Sheddy, Walter Sheddy and Misses Laura Sheddy, Doraey Bailey and W. Kay Jodan, ot IVjason Hill; Harry, Minnie, George and Clara Dili, Miss Blanche Jordan, Huston Hill; Miss Carolvne Murray, Benriezette; Miss lUurriel Bailey, Sinnaraahoning, and Miss Ethel Sheddy, Sterling Run. All en joyed n lovely time, participating in games and enjoy ing delightful refresh ments The merry-making was kept up until ,i late hour when all departed tor their homos, wishing Miss Vera many happy returns of the Jay, not forgetting to remember this excellent young lady with many presents. Miaa Tanner, the eldest daughter of our friend O. B. Tanner, took full, charge of a family of small children up on the death of her mother, two years ago, and has faithfully and zealously filled the exacting and respot sible posi tion, therby earning the admiration and praise of her host of friends. A grand, good young lady—" Fine LITTLE MOTHEIt " Agricultural Pamphlets. Sines issuing the third edition of its agricultural pamphlets on "Alfalfa" and "Use of Lime on Land," the Penn sylvania Railroad Company has deter mined to enlarge upon its work in the dissemination of farming literature, and has just sent out for distribution through its freight representatives a series of pamphlets on orchard develop ment. Some 18,000 of the first edition ol these pamphlets were printed. Accompanying the pamphlets on orchard development is an announce ment from the Pennsylvania Railroad Company that, its purpose io "to offer to its patrons in the territory it serves the benefits of scientific research and improvement in methods resulting from careful study and experiment." The new pamphlets, which are to be given a large circulation, have as their subjects "Planting," "Cultivation," "Pruning," and "Spraying." The next matter was written specially for the P,;nns" 1 vania Railroad Company by Professor 11. A. Surface, Economic Zoologist cf the"State of Pennsylvania. They were also approved by Hon. N 8.. Critchflold, State Secretary of Agricul ture. The Teeth Should be well brushed from two to four times each day with a good brush also a good preparation. Never resort to just clear I water ai d liquids, use either a paste i •,i powder. There is nothing etierthau Enthynol Tooth Paste It cleanses the teeth, destroys disease germs and purifies the breath. EMPORIUM DRUG COMPANY. Successors to M. A. ROCKWELL. Automobile The new model for 1910 has just arrived and is now ready for inspection ! at our Garage on Third street. Bef-"" placing your order r>.i- a new ma chine examine the NEW FORD. ! EMPORIUM i Machine Co., EMPORIUM, PA,
Significant historical Pennsylvania newspapers