THE CAMERON COUNTY PRESS. ESTABLISHED BY C. B. GOULI, MARCH, 1866. VOL. 35. | A Jffld-W inter I I Proposition. I i | We are closing out our stoak % } of winter Coate and Capes re- % A gardless of cost in order to make ' 'A room for spring st<>ck. i| I ■ ■/I g / Coats that were s(>.oo now $3.50 N| Coats that wero 8.00 now 4.75 'y. Coats that were 11.50 now 7.50 S '/\ Coats that were 15.00 now 9.00 | I Underwear and 'i Hosiery, £ <| Will also close out Winter 1% / Underwear and Hosiery at / greatly reduced prices. £ / Now is the time to get bar- % gains in all kinds of winter / £ goodH - | % %>, I W. H. CRAMER S | Y The Popular Variety Store. % % % /\ .V \ \ V\ \ \ \ X X, \A iR. SEGER SON,f 9 •) (* FASHIONABLE •) 1 MRS id J 1 Furnishers, j Next to Bank, Emporium, Pa. | New WINTER jj | Styles | 9 Embracing everything in Clothing and V V Furnishing line now opered. Nothing •) 9 like it ever sven in this county. Call aim •) 9 gee the new styles in Neckwear. Collars, V y etc. We are sole agents for the •) | LION BRAND SHIRTS | MC "HON BRAND" TRADE MARK SECRETARY » •) (• We are agents for •) (• •) S THE 5 | MAC HURDLE « « FULL DRESS |j 2 SHIRTS. J c* * C* And call the attention of our customers J 2 to this excellent line of wear. Those who * '• desire a first-class article can now be ac- •< commodated. * I R. SEGER & SON, j (• • C* Emporium, Pa • g fejgl 1 1□ • tejjgi 'rm jgjjg i' l u n • EASTMAN'S KODAK £ | ( Smoke It ._ 1 [j sIX I* r i a and smoke it. It will lie a burning proof of the goodness ''■*■ j J ■\ \ j ififis 3 and quality we sell here for little money. Years of business &£gjA j p IPIIPH UJ \ lias convinced us of two things—that we can make the most & £g!£r\ l| 'I \jl_i '>• < money by being perfectly honest, and that almost every smok- / Sj /W /J$ : 11l *er has a different pipe taste. The pipes we have —well, there Jm JH Mi |jj < are long pipes, short pipes and pipes so twisted that /M J»> ' [jjjl " )it would take you a month to unravel them. Pi ir r in i nil 1 l''*T -,L Iff jjj| } too —but there are none of them long—none of them twisted, ar Jf p, [I Youcan carry it inyourhands,onyour shoul- i TO. 1^ *j der, in your pocket or on yourbicycle. < Vw JJr j] Yo " u f; e r^t the button *" d tl,e Kodak wi " y HARRY S. LLOYD. p Uncle Sam's Rapid Expansion. Has Been at the Kate of Thirty Acres a Minute for a Century. The expansion of the territory of the United States during the 117 years that have ©lapsed since Great Britian, by the treaty of 1783, recognized our sov ereignty over he land we claimed uorth of the t-panish and east of the French possessions, has been at the 1 rate of thirty acres of land for each minute, says the New York Herald. 1 Our 3,000,000 of inhabitants started in 1783 with 558,679,360 acres of land, which , satisfied them for twenty years. Then in 1803, under an agreement with France, they consumated the Lousiana purchase, and more than doubled our territory by adding to it the 745,103,360 acres that reach from the Mississippi to the Pacific, including the mighty ex pause of plain and mountain that falls I into prairie slopes, dropping to the great river, extending from Canada to the northern lines of California, Ne- 1 vada, Utah, embracing nearly all of Colorado and including parts of Kan-. sas and the Indian Territory. Sixteen years passed, and in 1819 ' wo received Florida from Spain. It j included what are now southern por- ; tions of Alabama and Mississippi, and ! added to the Union *15,719,680 acres. Then, in 1845, came the annexation of Texas, with 170,247,040 acres. Three years afterwards we had the Mexican cession of 460,563,840 acres, that gave us the rich state of California, Utah, New Mexico, Arizona, and parts of Colorada, Kansas and Oklahoma. To all of this was added Alaska, in 1867, with its 383,646,720 aores, and on top of this, more recently, came the Philippines, Puerto Rico,Tutulia, Guam and Hawaii—partly as a result of tho Spanish war—adding 98,492,160 acres. All of these make 1,903,772,800 acres after the treaty of 1783. Since then there have been 61,495,200 minutes, which, divided into the numberof acres gives thirty and a large fraction of an acre for each minute. During those 117 years tho population of the expand ing territory has grown from 3,000,000 to 84,522,029 which is an increase of four inhabitants for each three minutes. ... How it Works. Truly there is nothing new under the sun. They had the same kind of peo ple and the same kind of business men in the days of Kiug Solomon that we have to-day. They had the hustler who let every body know what he was doing and when he had bargains for the people he scattered news of them over the entire land, and it increased his profits and helped him grow fat. Then, again, they had the drone who bought a stock of goods, that he must have been ashamed of, and shut him self up in his store and with-held all knowledge from the public of what he had for sale, and he grew poorer and more poverty stricken every day. And the wise old King saw the way things worked and proclaimed to his people the benefits of judicious advertising in the following: Prov. 11; 24, ?5: "There is that scat tereth and yet increaseth; and there is that withholdeth more than is meet, but it tendeth to poverty. The liberal soul shall be made fat: and he that wat ereth shall be watered also himself. What "We" Means. Somebody has explained the signifi cance of the editorial "we." It may have a variety of meanings. For ex ample, when you read "We expect our wife home to-day," "we" refers to the editor; "We are a little late with our j work" includes the whole office force, (even the devil and the towel; in "We are having a boom," the town is meant; "We received over 100,000 emigrants last year," embraces the nation; but "We have hog cholera in our midst" means that the man who takes our pa per and does not pay for it is ill.—Wall I Lake (la.) Blade. J No ÜBO looking elsewhere for a sup- I ply of clothing when you can not possi | bly do any better than to deal with N Seger. "Liberty and Union, One and Inseparable."— WEßSTEß. EMPORIUM, PA., THURSDAY, .JANUARY 10,1001. Emporium School Board. Stated meeting of Emporium School Board met at City Hall, Jan. 7th, 1901. Present: Messrs. L. K. Huntington, T. F. Moore, F. P. Rentz, B. Egan, W. S. Walker. Absent: J. D. Marshall. Minutes of last stated and special meetings read and approved. The following bills were ordered paid: Tuning pianos, (Baker), t 5 00 Roberts & Meek, stationery 21 00 Houghton. Mifflin & Co., books; 10 92 American Hook Co., books, 15 36 Milton, Bradley & Co., Crayon, - stitute. [COPY ] Post Office Department. First Assistant Postmaster General. Office of Superintendent, Free Deliv ery System. WASHINGTON, Jany. Bth, 1901. HON. J. C. SIBLEY, M. C., House of Representatives, Washington, D. C., Dear Sir:— I take pleasure in informing you that in accordance with your request Rural Free Delivery Service has this day been ordered established from Emporium, Cameron County, Pennsylvania, with two carriers, to commence on Friday, February Ist, 1901. Very Respectfully, W. M. JOHNSON, First Ass't Postmaster Gen'l. A Daring Feat. A Sinnamahoning correspondent sent the following to the Philadelphia North American: "Leaning over a yawning chasm, holding fast by one arm, while she operated a camera with the other hand, Miss Minnie Van Lew photographed the Sinnamahoning Pe destrians' Club, as its members posed on the dizzy heights of the big rock on the Allegheny Mountains a few days ago. A slip and she would have plung ed to death, 1100 feet below. Miss Van Lew is a resident ot Seattle, Wash ington. The club, of which Miss Van Lew is an honorary member, is made up of energetic young women of this quiet town, with whom mountain climbing is a favorite pastime. No peak of the Alleghenies is too difficult of access for them. One of their favorite haunts is known as Big Rock, a large crag 11CO feet high, a perpendicular wall, over looking the Sinnamahoning Valley. Nine out of every ten men who attempt the ascent quit discouraged. The young man who cannot scale this beet ling cliff' with them is looked upon as unworthy of their companionship, and finds himself quickly outside their cir cle of friends. There is no other point on the big rock at which the club photograph could be taken than the one shown in the picture, and Miss Van Lew volun teered to take it. BRIEF HENTION. Read Cramer's new "ad" this week. Almost every home in Emporium is invaded by that demon la grippe. The United States Senate yesterday voted to abolish the army canteen, by a vote of 34 to 15. A number of Emporium Masons vis ited Port Allegany yesterday to assist in Chapter work. The Williamsport News Annual for 1901 is a volume of great credit and certainly will be found invaluable for reference. 2,000,000 freight cars passed over the middle division of the Pennsylvania railroad during the year 1900. How is that for calamity? That old Republican standby, the Smethport Miner, last week entered upon its 38th year. Brother Backus gets up a good paper and ably main tains the record of that popular sheet. Fusion has received its death blow ■ and the will of the majority, the great j American principle, will be ratified at | Harrisburg on the 15th, when that ; stalwart son of Pennsylvania, Matthew ! Stanley Quay, will be given the certifi. cate as senior Senator from the old | Keystone. Shippen Republican Candidates. The following candidates have filed their names and paid the fee as candi | dates for office, to be voted for at the j Shippen Republican primaries. No j names will be entered upon the ticket 1 unless fee is paid in advance: Frank Sweesey, Supervisor, j A. Cheesbro, Supervisor. If you want to Borrow money, If you want to Buy Anything,— 1 Advertise in the PRESS NO. 46.