4 Sc3rr)er&r) j^r-css ESTABLIaUKU BY C. )i. GOULD. | v HENRY 11. MULLIN, Editor and Manager. I'TTBLISHED EVERY THURSDAY j : TERM* OF St; BSCRII'TION: p. . | It paid t» advance V j ADVERTISING RATES. Advert! ementst-republishedat the rote-of one j dollar '■ i square for oneinsertion and Bltycents j nor square for each subsequent insertion. I I lilt, - by the year or 112 r six or three r.iouths are i low ,va<: uniform, and v. ill be furnished on appli- I cation. ~ ! • md Official Ad- rti- tip per square, three j tvr*. or less. $2 00; each subsequent jnserttonSO | cents per square. Loc a 1 notices ten cents per 1 ine for onei nsertton, ti vr cents per line for eacnsubsequentconsecutive 1 iurcrtiou. Obit viiy notices over five lines, ten cents per i ino. -Lmpleannouncenients ofbirtlm.mai riages ard dfjths will be inserted fr. li-isin osC.ircls. five lii'.'s or less (9.90 per year j iu 11 velines, it t the result!r ra'i-s of advertising ; N»> local inserted for less l iuui 75 els. per issue, JOB PRINTING. The Job department of the PRESS is complete, i aort v.Tords facilities for doing the best class ol j work. PABTICULAK ATTENTION PAID TO Law ' Printing. No paper willbe discontinued until arrearages i R p-id, except at the option ofthe publisher. Pa'.', ra sent on . ofthe county uiusl be paid for 1 in advance. j REPUBLICAN TICKET. STATE. Justice of the Supreme Court, HON. WILLIAM P. POTTER. State Treasurer. HON. FRANK O. HARRIS. • Political Aamouncemciits. All Announcements under this head vwst 'xa.j signed by the candidate and paid in advance to I nsu.-e publication. ASSOCIATE JUDGE. tor Press:— I Please announce my name as a candidate for ; Associate Judge, subject to the decision ofthe Republican County Convention. GEO. A. WALKER. | Emporium, Pa., July 15th, 1901. COUNTY TREASURER. Editor Press: Please announce my name as a candidate for i County Treasurer, subject to the decision of the | Rcpntican County Convention. IXIHU CHADWICK, j Shippen, Pa., July 13th, 1901. V * * Editor Press:— Please announce my name as a candidate tor i the office of County Treasurer, subject to the i decision ofthe Cameron Couuty Republican Con- i vention. WALTER YOTHERS. j Driftwood, Pa., July 17th, 1901. Mow They Hurt Them. Didn't the Democrats hit the trusts hard when they were in power? Didn't , they hit the Whiskey Trust when they i extended the time for paying the ninety j million dollars taxes due the Govern- 1 ment? Didn't they lam it to the Sugar I Trust when they dallied with the Tariff bill until the trust had scraped the earth j for raw sugar and brought it in free under the McKinley bill? Didn't they j sock it to the trusts again when they repealed the anti-trust provision of the ! McKinley bill which imposed a fino not exceeding §.5,000 on persons convicted of entering into a trust, and then enact ed an anti-trust law that prescribed no | penalty against trusts, except among j importers, who are not organized and never have been? Don't they make the trusts tremble when they assert that only the Protective Tariff fosters them, while it is known that trusts are ! organized and nourished in Free-Trade England ? Don't they land another staggering blow to the trust octopus when they threaten to bust it, when it is known that ther national chairman, James K. Jones, belongs to one ofthe biggest trusts in America? Didn't they ■ hit the Ohio trusts hard when they de nounced them in their platform in 1899 and then went to Washington, D. C., | and picked out the rankest monopolist j and trust stock owner to run for Gov-! ernor? Didn't the New York Demo-; cracy present a fine spectacle as a trust ' tighter with a ringleader of the whole pack crimminally connected with the j American Ice Trust? Didn't Chair- ; man Jones land another broadside into j the octopus when he offered an amend- ! ment to the Iv.rto Rican Tariff bill to ; return the d-.tios on sugar imported from tiiat island to the person from | whom they were collected, which would ! have put over §600,000 back into the 1 handu ofthe Sugar Trust?—Bridgeton i 'N. J.) "Pioneer." Letter to H. C. Olmsted. Emporium, Pa. Dear Sir: There are a thousand ways j to cheat in our business; and whether our neighbors suspect us of cheating or not, depends on ourselves, our talk, I our face, our eye, our walk, our stand- I ing straight up or crooked—our neigh- j bors know all about us without being : told ! j We are pretty well known. We are ! no infant—l4o years old —began busi- j nesn on this little island (New York) i in 17(")4. # Have been making paint and j a noise in the world ever since. And there isn't a man, alive or dead, j that wouldn't testify for us, if you j should stir him up. We grind lead and zinc in linseed oil ! by machinery, all together. That's our ; business.|We live on the proflt-machin- j ery over hand-work. Painters mix j their paint by hand—they imagine they j do —they half mix it. We grind to- I gether: whole-mix. Better and costs ! less money. We are the very best friend the paint- j er has, if he knows it—yes, whether he j knows it or not. He can't afford not to ! know it. We are the painter's custom- j er'B friend We save them both money, i Yours truly, F. W. DEVOE & Co. Mr. G. A Stillman, a merchant of Tampico, 111., writes: "Foley's Kidney j Cure is meeting with wonderful success. | It has cured some cases here that pliysi- j cians pronounced incurable. I mysell j am able to testify to its merits. My face j to-day is a living picture of health, and j Foley's Kidney Cure has made it such." | L. Taasrart. A Misdirected Sentiment. Professor Shaler of Harvard IJnivcr j sity, in his recent book, "The Individual," makes a considerate, but much needed, protect against the prevalent custom oi -pending money in costly monuments lo mark the final resting place of the dead. Life is nothing without sentiment" but sentiment should be enlightened and directed by rational considerations, and we contend that this way of lionoiing the departed does not commend itself to the most enlightened judgment. Granting | that it is desirable, from the individual's I own point of view, that his memory I should not be forgotten, it is possible in ; any real way to save from oblivion the ; memories of the vast majority oi men ? ' President Eliot of Harvard has expressed ; the opinion that only about one person | in ten million is destined to achieve last ing fame; oblivion more or less complete i will be the sure portion of the rest. The , | memory of au ordinary person will not out- : i live the lives of those who knew him i i personally. Only a limited circle of these. ! made up ol his nearest relatives and | ! closest friends, will really cherish his | memory, and they will do it for love, and without the aid of an impo. ing shaft. I When this circle shall have passed away, | the memory ol his personality will also have perished utterly. His name may IK | preserved, but it will be but a name. ' And what is in a mere name ? lam ! speaking, remember, of the ordinary, un distinguished person. His grandchildren 1 will remember him, but to his great grandchildren he will be utterly unknown, i and if one is forgotten by his own des j cuidauts, how vain to think that he will Hbe remembered by others. llow many j of' us know the names of our great grand parents, or have ever seen their last ! resting places ? What does the slab in I memory of somebody else's forgotten I great grandfather signify to us? The ssmple fact ol the matter is that the at tempt to perpetuate one's memory to I future generations by means of a monu ment over his remains is most utterly futile. Erecting monuments to attract the attention of posterity is so much vain whistling to the wind. However sad it is to think that, one I day we shall be utterly forgotten, it would be demanding too much of pos | terity to expect anything else. The I stagnation of China is a warning against the undue demands of ancestors to be remembered by posterity. The duty which one owes to an ancestor of a century ago is infinitesimal as compared with his pre i sent duty to the life of the race and to 1 humanity. We belong to the race far j more immediately and completely than I we do to our individual ancestors. In i the future life of the race, the only thing about us that can live, or that ought to i live, is the consequences of our actions. The imprint of our lives upon the life | of the race will always abide, though ; even our names shall be utterly forgotten. \ Our place in the life of the race will be ! that of the small fragments of stone that ' goto till the interior crevices of a wall, I out of sight and out of mind. Comfort i enough there should bo in the reflection | that a thoughtful posterity will recognize ; in a general way their connection with the past and their indebtedness to those ; who lived before them. The attempt to perpetuate the memory | of one departed will be justifiable and ! will be effective if it take the form of some active service rendered to the com munity in his name. A lncmoriaPchurch, or school, or professorship, or library, or drinking fountain, or even a humble way side seat overlooking some beautiful j scene, will keep one's memory green and i fragrant far beyond what can be done to that end through a monument in a ceme j tery costing hundreds of dollars. Except I for the institutions which perpetuate their j names, Stephen Girard and Johns Hop kins would have been utterly forgotten : in two generations after their deaths. ! Who knows or honors the name of the i young man over whose body in Forest ] Lawn Cemetery, Buffalo, stands a monu ! mental pile costing thirty thousand dol i lars? The assertion has been hazarded that I more money has been expended upon ! monuments in our cemeteries than upon ; the entire educational system of our coun | try. It is possibly the fact. What a ! futile waste of hard-earned money. What an impoverishment this means of the life of the community. Why could not this money have beeu given for the support of Christian missions, or to our schools that the teachers might be paid the : salaries they ought to receive, or to the j equipment of hospital wards? Why ! should poor families who have barely I enough for the necessaries of life, under | the tyranny of a misguided sentiment, ! deny themselves those necessaries, or in | voive themselves in debt, in order to erect ! monuments of stone to tueir dead ? Such : monuments are futile as memorials. A j simple slab or marker would serve as I well to indicate for a century or so the ' exact resting place of the departed. After | that it will be a matter of entire indff'er ; ence whether the spot can be identified | or not. We nave been speaking of the ordi | nary, undistinguished individual. J. M. ROBERTSON. CASTOR IA For Infants and Children. The Kind You Have Always Bought i Signature of Zinc and Grinding Make ■ Devoe and Zinc Paint wear twice ■ as long aa lead and oil mixed by hand. CAMERON COUNTY PRESS, THURSDAY, SEPTEMBER 5, 1901. Shippen School Board. Regular meeting of Shippen School Board held at Court House August 3, with all members present. Minutes of previous meeting read and approved. Moved by Dixon, seconded by Peters to accept bid of Oilman Leavett for 10 cords 10 inch hard wood at 51.45 per cord; 2 cords dry pine at §1.45 per cord, at Truman school. Also 7 cords hard wood and '2 fiords of pine at Beechwood, at $1.45 per cord. Carried. Moved by Dixon, seconded by Peters, to employ Johnson & McNarney as council for the ensuinp year. Carried. Moved by Ostrum, seconded by Pet ers, that teachers meet at 3 o'clock for the adoption of books for the eomtng year. Carried. Moved by Spence, seconded by War ner, that Board meet at Russem's, on Four Mile Run, Saturday, Aug. 10 at 10 o'clock a. m. Carried. On motion the following bills were ordered paid: Owen Deninney, 10 cords wood, West Creek $ 20 00 S. S. Haokct, publishing auditors report. 30 00 I C. R. Kline, 5 days audi ing 10 00 | W. 1,. Brown, draying 2 00 I 11.I 1 . Hayes, draying 50 E. 11. Marshal, lumber in 1836 8 tli Cameron County Press, publishing and advertising 31 00 N. A. Ostrum, postage and stationary.. 2 50 Moved by Dixon, seconded by Os trum, to accept bid of Is;utc Ostrum to draw all children west of N. D. Brinks; to have said children at school by 9 a. m., prompt, and to be at school at 4 p. m., sharp, for $1.50 per day, with good covered rig to carry them in. Carried. Moved by Dixon, seconded by Peters to accept bid of Chas. King to clean and disenfect out-houses for the sum of SI.OO for each out-house. To bo cleaned according to law. Carried. The following committee was ap pointed to buy books; Dixon, Peters and Ostrum. Moved by Spence, seconded by Dix on, to pay Janitor Barker ?5.00 for the year. Carried. On motion the meeting adjourned until next regular meeting, Sept. 7, at ! 1. p. m. G. T. DIXON, Sec'y. Special meeting of Shippen School i Board at Court House, called by F. ! Moon, President, for the purpose of determining what to do with the up per Four Mile school, and to transact other business. All members present. Moved by Ostrum, seconded by Warner, to accept bid of F. Zimmer j for 6 cords 20 inch hard wood at 51.85 j per cord; 2 cords dry hemlock at §1.25 per cord, at Shippen school. Carried. Moved by Dixon, seconded by Os trum, to open school at upper Four Mile provided enough scholars come to warrant it, if not to close the school. Carried. Resignations of Miss Vida Housler and Miss Susan L. Chadwick accepted. O. S. Peters and L. W. Spence were appointed a committee to look after Bryan Hill school. Moved by Spence, seconded by Pet ers, to employ Mis 3 Druev Evers for Shippen school. Carried. Moved by Ostrum, seconded by Pet ers, that the following bills be paid; C. B. Howard & Co., for dynamite, caps and fuse, $6.15. G. T. Dixon, for postage and stationary, $2. Carried. On motion, meeting adjourned. G. T. DIXON, Sec'y. LAST OF THE SEASON. REDUCED RATES TO THE SEASHORE. Low-Rate Excursions to Atlantic City, j Cape May, etc., via Pennsylvania Rail ! road. The last Pennsylvania Railroad low ! rate fifteen day excursion of the season j from Erie, Rouseville, Tionesta, Roch- I ester (via Olean), Bradford, Clermont, j Dußois, and principal intermediate I stations to Renovo, inclusive, to Atlau j tic City, Cape May, Ocean City, Sea Isle City, Avalon, Anglesea, Wildtvood. or Holly Beach, will be run on Thurs day, September 5, 1901. Excursion tickets, good to retuen by regular trains within fifteen days, will be sold at very low rates. Tickets to Atlantic City will be sold via the Dela ware River Bridge Route, the only all rail line, or via Market Street Wharf, Philadelphia. Stop over can be had at Philadelphia, either going or returning. For information in regard to specific rates and time of trains consult hand bills, apply to ticket agents, E. S. Harrar, Division Ticket Agent, Will iainssort, Pa., or J. A. Fellows, Divi sion Ticket Agent, Buffalo, N, Y. 2099-27-21 Pennsylvania Railroad Reduced Rates to San Francisco. On account of the Triennial Conven tion of the Protestant Episcopal Church, to be held at San Francisco beginning October 2, the Pennsylvania Railroad Company will sell round-trip tickets to San Francisco from all points on its line at greatly reduced rates. Tickets will be sold September 18 to 25, inclusive, and will be good to return to leave San Francisco not earlier than October 3, and only on date of execution by Joint Agent, to whom a fee of fifty cents must be paid, and passengers must reach original starting point by November 15, 1901. The Pennsylvania Railroad Company will also run a Personally-Conducted Tour to the Pacific Coast on this oc casion by special train, starting Sep tember 23 and returning October 22. Round-trip rato, $lB5. For further information apply to ticket agents, or address Geo.W. Boyd, Assistant General Passenger Agent, Philadelphia. 2112 28-lt PENNSYLVANIA RAILROAD REDUCED RATES TO INDIANAPOLIS. Account Sovereign Grand Lodge, I. 0. 0. F. For the meeting of the Sovereign Grand Lodge, Independent Order of Odd Fellows, at Indianapolis, Septem ber 16 to 21, the Pennsylvania Railroad Company will sell round-trip tickets to Indianapolis from all points 011 its lines at rate of a single fare for the round trip. Tickets will be sold September 12 to 15, inclusive, and will be good to re turn, leaving Indianapolis not earlier than September 15 nor later than Sep tember 23. By depositing ticket with Joint Agent Sept. 15 to 23 and upon pay ment of fifty cents an extension of the return limit may be secured, to leave Indianapolis to October 7, inclusive. Foley's Honey and Tar cures colds, prevents pneumonia. TRl T STEE\S SALE. In the Court of Common Picas of Cameron County, Pennn., No. 28 April Term, !901. Sophia Johnson, M. M. Larrabee, and Laura Q. Freeman, Trustees under the will of Parmelia A. Freeman; Sophia Johnson devisee under the will of Huldah 0. Freeman, Seneca Freeman Russell, Emma Benn; and Sophia Johnson Trustee of Ethel Freeman, Olive Freeman and Clem ent Philips. vs I,aura O. Freeman, Trustee of Bertha J. Davis, Clytua Freeman and Otis Freeman. PARTITION. Notice is hereby given that under and tuir .u --ant to an order entered on the lifth day of July, 1901, in Hie above entitled i UK;' by tho said Court ofC.uneron County, the undersigned will, on Friday, the 2nth 2? protlaccs thoaltovo results In SO dayo. Iticta \'j r*i yi» mißi r»i 9ps m powerfully anil A.ißre new, Loßt Vitality,.liojKJtoncy, Nightly Eralealonß, oc 7! it. IIS Sil SI Jti S ilft£ H FIV-: Lost Power, Falling Momory, Wasting Diseases, and "SH IIIIIX I 2 a Jv'l I £■ RQ K" all effecta of aelf-obuuo or excess and Indiscretion, a flsH ■■ which ucflta ona for ctady, business or marriage. It P-cS§O REMEDY AND Ho,§ cot only enrea by starting at the seat of disease, but 1 «*T*i 1 iiiimwiiiniiir- 1 " - "MMUIIII .. ..IMMBBW?.' laorpeat nerve tonic and blood builder, bricj ' rslfaaEHJ^iiui^.il^J r. - - j nc . jjactr th® pink glow to cheeka and re ft* WP-Pi!\/F- fO W! G K* storing tho firo of yonth. it wards off Jnsinitj W e>is " •*V ®— I -w'l rr and Coaaumption. Insist on bavingKEl'lTO, no R. O. Dodsoil, Agent, other, it can bo carried in rest pocket. By mail 36-281 v Emporium Pa 31,00 per package, or eli for ®5.00, v/V:h u.poel " * ' " tlve writ Van Bcaraataa to euro or icfurtS _ . the money. Book and adviss free. Address Fo/ey's ATM/ley Core KOYAUIEMCISEC9.,'-»SaOS?- makes kidneys and Mulder right 1 " 1 ' :■ " ■ ■ ' "■•' for infants and Qifoiidren. The Kind. You Have Always Bought luts borne tho signa ture of Clins. 11. Fletcher, and has IK-MI made under his j'crsvx.-al supervision for over IJO years. Allow no one to deceive you in this. Counterfeits, Imitations and " Just-as-good" are but Experiments, and endanger the health of Cliildren—Experience against Experiment. The Kind You Have Always Bought V 9 Bears the Signature of hi Use For Over 30 Years. ~^ J C. G. SCHMIDT'S^ HEADQUARTERS FOR gpii FRESHBREADi 0 Popular Pl ™ w ru o NUTS )DdHery, $ CONFECTIONERY Daily Delivery. All orders oiven,prompt and skillful attention. \\ \ \ \ \ \ \ \ N.N \ \ VA N N N \ \ N N \ \ N.N/ \ $ : The Popular Store \ / v % We are headquarters for Men's Furnishing Goods. C There is a reason why we sell so many of these goods. The i - reason is that our line is more complete than at any other 112. % store in this section. Then again, we handle nothing but / %. the very best, and nothing but union made goods. / % 112: / We are well pleased with the business of the past two / weeks, but things must move laster as our fall goods are ar- |? riving daily. We are offering some extraordinary bar- £ gains in our y | | | Clothing Department. | 1 | % ... . \ Remember our Clothing is all union made. Strictly the best on the market for the money. £ % I | Men's, Youth's and % Children's Clothing. | | Hats, Caps and Shoes, I | Overalls, etc., etc. | | Every Man I $ / Has or ought to have an eye to his attire. Fine cloth- / / ing is the uniform of success and prosperity. / Our store is an educator to wear the right and correct / ''y styles ol the swellest novelties for suits and trousers. We 'y h have some fine clothes- for £• 112 / st t Business Suits, C y 112 / Traveling Suits, / % Dress Suits. I JASPER HARRIS, | * % I 1 Remember the place—Directly / ¥ Opposite Post Office, Emporium, Pa. i < • \ X N \ \ \ S..V \ ;V \A \ V \ \ \ V \ \ V V \\