8 IT SEETHE ' "Tl n Arrivals b g FOR 1901! *J Without a doubt the largest, k high-class, popular manufac- C turesof Cloths ever brought r & into Cameron county, at | R. SEGER & I | COHPANY'S. kj We have taken especial care kj Kj in the selection of our goods jjj aud propose giving our hun- R n dreds of customers. J HONEST. WELL-MADE GLOTHING t t AT LOWEST LIVING PRICES. k Every dollar's worth of goods w must give the wearer satisfac- u £ tion. We desire all who in tend purchasing a suit of clothes this Fall to file their p fe orders early, that carc may be Ni p given to every customer, no (w matter whether you want a V-<;ill, Clarksbur*. Teno., writes PR |2 "In a practice of 'J3 year. - . I lime fouii'l no remedy to |H Hjl cquni > mrs.' I'iuck, i'J Ckhti, Samples Krec. SoM H g| MARTIN RUDY, LANCASTER, PA. ffl Sold in lEmporium by 1.. Taggart. Call for free sample. £ DR. FENMER'S g REftpPY AND M? 4; Wner7bto^^T R. C. Dodson, Agent, 36-'2Bly. Emporium, Pa j ■MMBagfgSaMgHaaaMBBWMMM : pMarn"™?it. Dean's M A safe, ccrtnln relief for Suppressed I 1 ffi Menstruation. Never known to full. Safe! j ■ Sure! Speedy! Satisfaction Guaranteed H Hor money Refunded. Sent prepaid for I |fi SI.OO per box. Will send them 011 trial, to j H be paid for when relieved. Samples Free. g B UNITED M EPICAL CO., Bon 74. LANCOITCH, *a. g Sold in Emporium by L. Taggart. For years this remedy has been the standard nerve restorative. Thousands of happy men owe their newly found strength to its use. Sexiue Pills replace weakness and exhaustion with strength and vigor; the brain becomes clear; the nerves steady and calm; gloomy forebodings arc banished and perfect vitality is ful ly restored. If you are suffering as above, try a box; you'll be encouraged by its effect to take the full course of six boxes— then if you are not entirely cured, we will refund your money. This satis factory offer is one of the factors of our success. • 81.00 per l>ox ; 6 boxes (with guaran ; tec to cure or money back), 80.00, mailed in plain packages. Book free. PEAL J MEDICINE CO., Cleveland, Ohio. ■ For sale by R.C. Dodson, Emporium, Pa. 51 I BANNER 8 A LVE I I "•« mof( h«»*iing salvo inthe world. t rh Mr REVBVd yiTALITY THE OF Me. ESr-JEi.ttML.I? CTE&XEKTCHS: xusxsuCEncnr produces the abovo rosnlia In 30 dtiya. It acta powerfully and quickly. Curea when all others fal!. Soundmen will regain their lott manhood, and old men w ill recover their youthful vigor by usinrj HKVIVO. It aulckly and surely rea tores Nervous noee. Lost Vitality, Id potency, liiKhtly Krulacicnr, Coot Power, Falling Memory, Waßtiwr Diseases, and ell electa of self-abasa or oscesoand iudiacrttlon, Which unfits one for study, business or Inarr:ag_\ It cot only cures by (-.tailing at the Bent o£ disease, bu" ig a great nerve tonic nnd blood builder, bring ing baci tho pink glow to palo cheeks and ra- the Are of yonth. It wards oil Insanity and Consumption. Insist on having UEVIVOi no other. It c&a bo carried in vest pocket. By mail 01.00 per package, or six (or 80.00, with a poel live written guarantee to care or refund the money. Book and advise free. Addresa ROYAL MEDICINE CO., ,6 cH°icA y (X" u illL"'' For Sale in Emporium, by K. C. Dodson. CAMERON COUNTY PRESS, THURSDAY DECEMBER x 9 IQOI. ALL SORTS. Worms take refuge in tlic smitll intcs- I tine, where they can easily multiply, J WHITE'S CUKAM VRRMIKUUE will •!«;- I stroy these parasites. The verdict of the people tells plainly how well it has sue ceeded. Price, 25 cents. L. Taggart. Whom we love best, to them we can say least. Praise the bridge that carries you over either a flood or cough. BALLARD'S IIOKEIIOUND SYKUP has brought so many over throat and lung troubles, such as coughs, colds, bronchitis, etc., that its praises are sung everywhere. Price, 25 and 50 cents. L. Taggart. Love is the occupation of an idle man, the amusement of a busy one, and the shipwreck of a sovereign. J. W. Bryan, of Lowder, Ills., writes: "My little boy was very low with pneu monia. Unknown to the doctor we gave lrim Foley's Honey and Tar. The result was magical and puzzled the doctor, as it immediately stopped the racking cough and he quickly recovered." L. Taggart. One expresses well only the love he docs not feel. Disease and danger lurk in the vital organs. The blood becomes vitiated and the general health is undermined when ever the stomach and liver fail to perioral their functions as nature intended. IIEII BINE will tone up the stomach, regulate the liver, where other preparations only relieve. Price, 50 cents. L. Taggart. There's beggary in the love that can be reekon'd. An attractive wouian thrives on good food and sunshine, with [plenty of exer cise in the open air. ller form glows with health and her face blooms with its beauty. When troubled with a costive habit, she takes a few doses of lIERBINE to cleanse her system of all impurities. Price, 50 cents. L. Taggart. Love is master of the wisest. It is only fools who defy him. Editor Lynch of 'Daily Post" Philips burg, N. J , has tested the merits of Foley's Honey and Tar with this result: "I have used a great many patent re medies in my family for coughs and colds, aud I can honestly say your Honey and Tar is the best thing of the kind I have ever used and I cannot say too much in praise of it." L. Taggart. Jack in love is no judge of Jill's beauty. No one can reasonably hope for good health unless his bowels move once each day. When this is not attended to, dis orders of the stomach arise, biliousness, headache,dyspepsia and pile:; soon follow. If you wish to avoid these ailments keep your bowels regular by taking Chamber lain's Stomach and Liver Tablets when required. They are so easy to take and mild aud gentle in effect. For sale by L. Taggart. Love places a genius and a fool on a level. For family use in numberless ways i BALLARD'S SNOW LINIMENT is a useful | and valuable remedy. Price, 25 and 50 ■ cents. L. Taggart. ! Let him who would not bo idle fall in i love. TAHLER'S BI.CKEVE PILE OINTMENI' ! has been thoroughly tested for many j years, and is a positive cure for this most | distressing and embarrassing of troubles. ! Price, 51) cents iu bottles. Tubes, 75 j cents. L. Taggart. Love being the lighter, when mixed j with business, always rises to the top. A cold, cough or la grippe can be i "nipped in the bud, with a dose or two lof Foley's Honey and Tar. Beware of j substitutes. L. Taggart. Love is the business of the idle, but the idleness of the busy. To Stop A Cold. After exposure or when you leel a cold coming on, take a dose of Foley's Honey aud Tar. It never fails to stop a cold if taken in time. L. Taggart. The lover shuts his. eyes and tells him self lies. Satisfied People Are the best advertisers for Foley's Honey and Tar and all who use it agree that it is a splendid remedy for coughs, colds or sore lungs. L. Taggart. Lovers and poets are privileged to lie. Chas. Beplogle, Atwatcr, (). was in very bad shape. He says:"l suffered I a great deal with my kidneys and was re | ijuested to try Foley's Kidney Cure. I j did so and in four days 1 was able togo | to work again, now I am entirely well." j L. Taggart. The Beat Cold Cure is one you can take without interruption to business. One that does not aflect the ( head or hearing like the continued use of j quiuine. One that cures speedily and | leaves you feeling fresh and clear-headed. I Such a one is Krause's Cold Cure. Price ! 20c. Sold by L. Taggart. | Love makes fools wits, and wits fools. C. W. Lynch, Winchester, Ind., writes: ''l owe the life of my boy to Foley's Honey aud Tar. He had membraneous j croup, and the first doso gave him relief. | We continued its use and it soon brought ; him out of danger." L. Taggart. Love makes time pass, aud time makes | love pass. Colds Melt Away i it you use Krause's Cold Cure. Prepared in convenient capsule form they are easy to take and effect a speedy cure of the most obstinate cases. Price 25c. Sold by L. Taggart. QUAINT COLLEGE LAWS. R"li» I'rcnorlUlHK the I)rc«s of Unr lunl siuilc..tß In Bygouc Days. The curious 1 . \vs regarding students' dress which prevailed at Harvard up to the middle the last century are illus trated by two eighteenth century waist coats which are among the collections of the Boston Art museum. One was worn by a member of the class of 1749 and the other by his sou iu 1784. The latter waistcoat is olive green in rolor, conforming to the college regula tions, which required either blue gray, plain black, "nankeen"—a kind of buff —or olive. The coat and breeches which originally went with it, as one may read in the old time Harvard "Laws," were blue gray. Freshmen of that date were allowed only plain buttonholes, sophomores leaped to the dignity of having buttons on their cuffs. Juniors might have inexpensive frogs to their buttonholes except that they might not have them on their cuff buttonholes, and the senior enjoyed frogs, button holes and buttons complete. Seniors and juniors were permitted also to wear black Oxford gowns, such as are worn at graduation today, and a "night gown," or dressing gown, was per missible on certain uuimportant occa sions. It cost "not more than 10 shil lings" for every appearance of gold or silver adornment. The rules of costume were changed, of course, from time to time. In 1828, for example, the prescribed dress con sisted of a black mixed coat, single breasted, "with a rolling cape square at the end and with pocket flaps, the waist reaching to the natural waist, with lapels of the same length." It is explained that "black mixed," called also Oxford mixed, was black with not more than one-twentieth nor less than one-twcnty-lifth part of white. The senior was allowed to support his dig nity with three "crow's feet" of black silk cord on the lower part of his coat sleeve. Two crow's feet were permitted to the junior, one to the sophomore and qoae at all to the freshman. The waist coat was of black mixed or of black or, when of cotton <.r linen fabric, of white; single breasted, with a standing collar. The pantaloons were of black mixed. APHORISMS. Good counsels observed are chains of grace.—Fuller. The beauty seen is partly in him who sees it.—Bovee. Admiration is 1 lie daughter of igno rance.— Franklin. In great attempts it is glorious even to fail.—Louginus. The one prudence of life is concen tration.—Emerson. The golden age is before us, not be hind us.—St. Simon. Levity in behavior is the bane of all that is good and virtuous.—Seneca. Better be driven out from among men than to be disliked by children.— Dana. Loving kindness is greater than laws, and the charities of life are more than all ceremonies.—Talmud. Have you so much leisure from your own business that you can take care of that of ether people that does not belong to you ?—Terence. A Iln 11 Jesnnke's Fnngn. You often hear of rendering a rattle snake harmless by pulling out its fangs. Then, again, you read of cases where a serpent so treated lias bitten persons fatally. The reason for this is that a poisonous snake is deprived only temporarily of its venomous powers by the extraction of the two incisors In the upper Jaw. a: the liases of which are the poison glands. Of course you know that the fangs are hollow, so that when the animal strikes the von oni gushes through them into the tlesh of the person struck. Now. by draw ing the two teeth the snake may be rendered harmless for a few weeks, but after a short time the two teeth just behind the original fangs move up and take their places, making connec tion with the poison glands and thus becoming poison fangs as good and ef fective as the old ones. Hornets iintl Cold. Colonel Sir T. 11. Iloldich, writing in 'The Indian Borderland" of the terrible storms and wind and snow which over lake the traveler on the high passes of the Herat mountains, remarks oil the superior power of the horse to with stand cold, in one such storm "over twenty men perished and many mules. All the dogs with the caravan were lead, but, so far as I can remember, ao horses. Yet some of the chargers of the Eleventh Bengal lancers got slowly jn their legs the day after the blizzard literally sheeted with ice as an ironclad s sheeted with steel." It is a fact worth noting that the horse will stand cold where a mule or a camel will not and where a dog will die. tintcN It» Norway. A curious feature to travelers In t lie highroads of Norway is the great num ber of gates—upward of 10,000 in the Whole country—which have to bo open ed. These gates, which either mark the boundaries of the farms or sep arate the home tields from the waste lands, constitute a considerable in convenience and delay to the traveler. Who has to stop his vehicle and get down to open them. Cruel iiiii! t iniNKiil rnnlHhmciit. Mrs. Bomim (hopelessly)— Mortimer, [ cannot make Willie mind. Mr. Boertmi (sternly)— William, do as your mother wishes, or I will make you go and sit :a the cozy corner.— Brooklyn Kagle. Hurry's IH'flurnt Son. She--Oh. Harry, it is awful! Papa has forbidden you the house! He—That's all right. It isn't the bouse I am after; it's you, darling.— Boston Transcript. "SHE BURNS GREEN." Tlii- Discovery of Rnrnx In DmIK 11" Anroti Winters. The (jreato.it discovery of borax in the United States was made in the ter ribly hot region known as Death val ley and in a most romantic way. The Chicago Record tells the story. In 1880 Aaron Winters lived with his wife, Itosle, in a gulch known as Ash Meadows, not far from the mouth of Death valley. He was so foiul of his wife that he would not allow her to be long absent from him, although their little hut on the side of the moun tain was a hundred miles from the nearest neighbor, in a wild, rugged forsaken country. One day a desert tramp eame along and spent the night at the Winters home. He told the hunter about the borax deposits of Nevada. When he went away. Winters thought that he had seen deposits of the same kind on his explorations into Death valley. Accordingly he and his wife went to gether to make the search, having pre viously provided themselves with cer tain test chemicals, which when com bined with borax and ignited would produce a green flame. Having procured a piece of the sub stance which he believed to be borax, Winters and his wife waited for night fall to make the test. How would it burn ? For years they had lived like Piutes on the desert, entirely without luxuries and often wanting for the very necessi ties of life. Would the match change all that? Winters held the blaze to the sub stance with a trembling hand, then shouted at the top of his voice: "She burns green, liosie! We're rich! We're rich!" They had found borax. The mine was sold for $20,000, and Winters took his Bosie to a ranch in Nevada. KITCHEN HELPS. Use a pancake lifter to place cookies on the baking tin and to remove them. To clarify fat after frying throw in a few slices of raw potato and simmer all for a few minutes. Grease spots that have become hard and burned in on ranges may be re moved by rubbing with a few drop* of kerosene on a cloth. Sometimes the fishy smell will cling to knives and forks after oily fish like salmon or mackerel lias been served. Cut a lemon, rub them with it, ami the disagreeable odor will vanish. Sometimes a large roasting pan, be ing infrequently used, gets rusty. To prevent wash it well after using, dry it in the oven, then while warm rub it over with a greased cloth and hang it away. Old newspapers save work in the kitchen. When you have any "messy" task on hand, like dressing a"'cliickeii, pickling over fruit, etc.. lay a paper on the table," gather the litter up with it and burn all together. This saves scouring the table. Why I!e Itencwetl Hist Youth. "Why, Brother Dickey, I hardly knew you, you're looking so young and spry! What's up now?" "Well, suh, I'ze studyin' 'bout gittln' married ergiu, dat's ail." "Getting married?" "Yes, suh. I made do 'quaintanee or a young gal terday, en she 'lowed dat ef I'd shave off my gray whiskers, en chop off de hair what on my head, en stop limpin' wid do rheumatism, en wear cloze what come out de sto', en smoke se-gars stidder pipe, en stop I reaelnn'- 'gin dancin', en secure my life in her favor fer a hundred dol lars she'd marry me. Dat how come I look so young!"— Atlanta Constitution. DurriM and ScnlriM. In cases of burns or scalds, when the skin is unbroken, cover the burn with white lead paint, glycerin, fresh lard, linseed, olive, sweet or lard oil or soapsuds. If the skin is broken, pour a mixture of oil and limewater (either linseed, olive, sweet or lard oil) in equal parts over the injury. Then place a soft piece of white linen er muslin wet with the oil mixture on the wound. Then loosely wind a bandage over this, removing it from time to time to wet the linen with the oil mix ture. Never attempt to uncover the in jury. The Finishing Touches. A girl who had been very clever at college came home, the other day and laid to her mother: "Mother, I've graduated, but now I must inform myself in psychology, phi lology, bibli"— "Just wait a minute," said the moth er. "1 have arranged for you a thor ough course in roastology, boilology, stitcliology, darnology, patchology and general domesticology. Now. put on your apron and pluck that chicken." I' ii fort n iixttt»ly. They wore driving together when Miss Hocks, unsolicited, gurgled forth her views upon matrimony. "Love is a dreary desert," she said, "and mar riage an oasis," whereupon Mr. Shy ly remarked that "certainly it did re quire a deal of sand."—-Boston Trav eler. A Good Xame, Tess—Oh, yes, she married a man with a highly honored name. Jess—What! I never considered Scadds a highly honored name. Tess—Well, you should see the way it's honored at the bank.—Philadelphia Press. A man should not lose his temper oftenor than once in ten years, aud a politician never.—Atchison Globe. The first Sunday paper in this coun try was The Sunday Courier, begun at NMW York in 1825. SPECIFICS V.A.J FEVERS, ConzeHtlons, Inflununa* UUES) tiotitf, Lung Fever, Milk Fever. I. II.) SI*RAI\W. Lameiiem*. Injuries, URKS) RhouiiinliHiii. / SORE THROAT, Quinsy, i: pi /,oo tie, ÜBES ) UiiiU'mpcr, URM | Dots, Grub*. 3, E. K'OI GHH, i'oldn, Influenza, Inflamed UREB J Lungs, I*l eu ro> Pneumonia. ('. F. M'OLICJ, Hellyache. \\lnd-Illown, LKKH J Diarrhea, l)v»ciit»*rv. i.G. Prevents MISCARRIjM«K. !■»"; | KID.XKY A BLADDER DISORDERS. '• '* iff BISEASEB, Mange, Eruptions, UUES ) L leers, Grease, Farcy. 112. R. ? R \n CONDITION, Htnrlnic Coat. I U&S ) fetouiueh KIOKKITM. Oc. each; Stable Cane, Ten Specifics. Book, Ac., fl. At druKglHts or sent prepaid on receipt of price. Humphreys' Medicine Co., Cor. William & John ;t».. New York. VETERINARY MANUAL SENT Vuju^ NEItYOUS DEBILITY, VITAL, WEAKNESS ind Prostration from Over work or other causes. Humphreys' Homeopathic Specific No. 28, in use over4o years, the only successful remedy. ,1 per vial,or special package with powder,for $5 Hold by DruKgltftH, or «eut post-paid on r*rt Ipt <»t pi (<•«. «»»IIRHVB*HKD. CO., Cor. William A Jolir M- « Vork F. G. Corsets! m a K e l\ AMERICAN BEAUTIES £ We Hove 3 tm&lP them in all / styles and * shapes to fu T every figure. corset is under ir> r r, | trial if corset id 112 * '•« 1 not satisfactory. \f LooK for this • " ,! * Trade Marh on A5'V" inside of corset * . and on box. - J KALAMAZOO 112 CORSET CO. ' Sole M a K e r lx. . • - a—l ;ure Woman's imm&dsatQ Relief, Packages. DesMoines.l^ 4SK YOUR DRUGGIST FOR TUB "CD CKOSL' BOOKLET. {MAILED FREE.) nOMEY UEFUHDEI) UF WOT AS WE KAY L. TaKgart. Foley's Kidney Cure makes kidneys and bladder right*