8 Woman's Ills How rare a thing to find a woman who is perfectly healthy. Fully seventy per cent, of the sex suffers from ailments which often render life a burden. These afflictions cause nervousness, irritability, melancholia, hysteria, etc. They entirely unlit a woman for life's work and deprive her of most of its joys. AUNT DINAH S OLD VIRGINIA Herb Tea WOMAN'S SAFE GUARD. Those suffering with disordered menstruation, female weakness, prolapsus, etc., will find im mediate relief irom the use of Aunt Dinah's Old Virginia Herb Tea and in the majority of cases it will bring about a complete cure. It is a positive cure for chronic constipation, sick headache and indigestion. In case of nervousness and sleep* lessness this tea will be found indeed n boon. It lias a soothing and quieting effect on the nerves and invariably induces sound, refreshing sleep. A cupful at bed-time is all that is necessary to make a woman well and keep her well. Mavesvlllo, 8. C., Dec. 8,1902. Ilamlins Wizard Oil Co., Chit-ago, 111.: Two >ears n* to I suffered with female complaint and use.l your Aunt Dinah's Old Virginia Herb Tea with g r« at'sueec I have just begun tuning It again and 1 feel much votinger and stronger. If every woman sufferer could Know the relief she would expei ieneo by using your Herb Tea uhe would never he without it. It jv a most wonderful remedy a.id 1 take pleasure in rec ommending it to any lady \\ ho i • uilVring with female troubles. MissC. L. CAttrcNTER. Mow, Leo Count v. Ark., Dee. 1,1902. Hnmlins Wizard Oil Co . Chicago, ill.: I hiii great Iv ideated villi your Aunt Dinah's Old Virginia llerh Tea. Indeed I think thereismdhinglike itforh. a-Uehoand stoma. h troubles and I llnd it ex ceedingly good for clearing the complexion. 1 would not be without it. Your - truly. Miss Nkta McCorki.e. Prepared by Daralics Wiitrd Oil Co., Chicago. Price, 25c. HAMLINS COUGH BALSAM Heals the Lungs. Wards Off Consumption. 25c. and 50c. HAMLINS BLOOD & LIVER PILLS Regulate the Liver. Cleanse the System. 25c. FOR SALE AND RECOMMENDED BY L T AGO ART. White Lead and Zinc are conceded to he essential to a first-class ready-mixed paint, but they must be thoroughly combined and used in the proper proportion to secure the best results. CHAMPION PAINTS. contain both White Lead and Zinc, without any barytes, lime, china clay, or other injurious substances and are combined in the proportions which have been found to give the best resuits after nearly fifty years' experience. They are made by tho Detroit White Lead Works in the finest paint and varnish plant in the country, and groundTo the last degree of fineness in Pure Linseed Oil. You take no chances when you use Champion Paints, they give perfect satisfaction to both house owners and painters. A handsome line of colors to select from. Call for sample cards and get prices before painting. L. TAGGART, Agent. I Pleased and Customers | Fours are to be found in nearly every home in this county. You ought to be one of them! We carry the LARGEST and BEST stock of j F URNiT LJ RE In this county. All made by SKILLED labor. i Our Bed-room Furniture Was all made in 1904. CROSS BANDED VENEER ■ and SOLID ends. Steel beds from O / to COO Cfl Guaranteed against breaking Mf*? JiuU Mattresses from <£| OS* to I flfl Also guaranteed 0' ■£- *J> IJ«UU I Baldwin Refrigerators Do refrigerate, and the price is within OC ffifl UP the reach of all We have the best Go-Carts in town aud challenge comparison. Quickest and handiest adjustment aiyl prices no higher than low grade goods. Lace Curtains from 60c per pair to SIO.OO. Carpets from 15c per yard to $1.50. Linoleums from 37/ c P er >' ar d to $1.50. All prices marked in plain figures are positively the I lowest for the goods we offer. Emporium Furniture Co., BERNARD EGAN, Manager. UNDERTAKING J §WHEN IN DOUBT, TRY They have stood the test of ye ai . OTDniIP 112 and have cured thousands ol AI K IW 1 (M 0 /wk "Xxvcases of Nervous Diseases, such U I 11UIIU lif/ f/A as Debility, DUziness. Sleepless- A A 1111 I ness and Varicocele,Atrophy,&c. All A I PI ! They clear the brain, stren E then , ' le circulation, make digestion perfect, and impart a healthy vigor to the whole being. All drains and losses are checked permanently. Unless patients are properly cured, their condition often worries them into Insanity, Consumption or Death. Mailed sealed. Price ft per bo*; 6 boxes, with iron-clad legal guarantee to cure or refund tho money, $5.00. Send lor free book. Address, PEAL MEDICINE CO.. Cleveland. 0. For sale by R. C. Dodson, Druggist. Emporium, Pa. Life is a oue sided fight for tlio mau who is his own worst enemy. A Great Bridge. For over a month I had been troubli <1 with a lame back and neck. The pain was severe that I could not sleep. I bought one bottle of Thompson's Bar osma or Kidney Cure and before the bottle was used up I was as well as ever and wish to speak a good ward for Bar osma the "Bridge that carried me safely over." E. S. Gray Shamburg, Pa. For sale by It. C. Dodson. If your guests fare'ill with you they are apt to say farewell to you. Do£lt;To-Day. The time-worn induction, '-Never put off til to morrow what you can do to day," is now generally presented in tl is form: "Do it today!" This is theterse advice we want to give you about that lucking cough or demoralizing cold wilh which you have been struggling tor seve eial days, perhaps weeks. Take sonit reliable remedy for it to-day—and let that remedy be Dr. Boschcc s (ieitnau Syrup which has been in use for over thirty-five years. A few doses of it will undoubtedly relieve your cough or cold, and its continued use for a few days will cure youecmpletely. No matter how deep-seated your cough, cvin if dread consumption has attacked your lungs German Syrup will surely effect a cure— as it has hone before in thouaands of ap parently hopeless eases of lung trouble. New trial bottles, 25c; regular size, 7">c, At all druggists. 49-ly. CAMERON COUNTY PRESS, THURSDAY, MAY 26, 1904. Huntly Note*. Editor Press: Well dear readers of the PRESS, please excuse me as I am no good at writing items, but am awful good at telling stories. I will give you a few hints about Huntley; so you will know that every thing is alive and prosperous, I ain not a very elegant writer but I am an awful good speller. I have not time to enter into all the details this time, but I will give a few. 1 have been traveling around for a week to pick'up something to say. I run across some curious things. The first thing I saw when I come up the road was B. J. and Clyde Collins plowing up the old flat,they had two teams and were running races. Clyde passed B. J- three times in fifteen minutes and then threw the dead lurrow in the railroad ditch and buried it. Then I went on up and who did I meet but tlie Hon. Richard Tates and Dr. Wm. Hickes both looking well, hadn't saw them for a long time. Next I saw John Jordan spading up his garden he said all the farmers wcte so busy that he could not get his garden plowed. 1 saw Thomas Kilburn who had just 'anic from Emporium. He said hew.v anin ; to buy a house and lot up there in tlie near future. I did not ask him whither he was going to keep bachelors hall or not. I saw a very bad accident happen in Wilson's mill just as I entered. The edger man got his hand cut off with the saw. I tell you there was quite a little excitement there for a while, and Hay Wilson took him to Rid»way Hospital. I went on up the road and I met Dan Kilburn limping home with his leg half cut oil', he said he was working with a '•green horn" half-breed by tlie name of Smithy who threw the ax at his leg to knock off a bumble-bee before it stung him; he knocked off the bee alright. I heard this morning that there was a new company operating in Huntley's Hun, called the Consolidated Lumber Co., but I did not investigate the matter. I went on up to Bennies hollow and found two young men trying to peel bark they had both climbed to the top of the tree and were trying to peel down, I asked them why they didn't cut the tree down and they said they had never thought of such a thing before. O dear, such curious people as we have here. It was quite dark by this time, so I did not sec any more things on my travles. BKUISER. Can the Blood be Purified. Scientists agree that it cannot while the kidneys are weak or diseased. All the blood in the body passes through the kidneys every three minutes and is filtered by them. In order to have the blood cleansed properly the kidneys must be well and strong. Thompson's Bar osma i.s the greatest kidney cure knftwn. Thompson's Barosma reduces all the in tiamation, ncutrlizes the acid and dis solves gravel, carrying off all matter that is poisonous to the blood, kidneys, stom ach, heart and other organs. For sale by R. C. Dodson. The only effective prison bars are those wc forge with our habits. A Sure Thing. It is said that nothing is sure except death and taxes, but that is uot alto gether true. Dr. King's New Discovery for Consumption is a sure cure for all lung and throat troubles. Thousands can testify to that. Mrs. C. B. Van Metre of Shepherdtown, W. Va.. say* "I had a severe case of Bronchitis and for a year tried everything I heard of, but got no relief. One bottle of Dr. King's New Discovery then cured me absolutely." ItV infalliable for Croup. Whooping Cough, Grip, Pneumonia and Consumption. Try it. It's guaranteed by L. Tagxart Druggist. Trial bottles free. Regular size 50c, 81. Sanitation is not salvation, but salva tion will include sanitation. Belief at Once. Immediate relief from backache, pain in the side, groin or hips is experienced by taking a large dose of Thompson's Barosma or Kidney and Liver Cure. A continuation of use will make a positive cure. Thompson's Barosma does uot contain opiates and a large reward is of fered for any injurious drug found in its composition. It is purely vegetable and a remedy adapted to all ages. Druggist. For sale by K. C. Dodson. When a fool has nothing to say ho is never satisfied until he says it. Reduced Rates to Unlontown. For the accommodation of those desir ing to attend the Prohibition State Con vention, to be held at Cniontown, Pa . June 7 to U, the Pennsylvania Railroad Company will sell round-trip tickets to Unioutown, June (i and 7, good to| re turn until June 10, inclusive, from all stations on its lines in the State of Penn sylvania at rate of single faro for the round trip (minimum rate, 25 cents). 3130-14-11. Q. A. R. Encampment. For the benefit of those desiring to at tend the Annual Encampment of the Grand Army of the Republic, Depart ment of Pennsylvania, at Gettysburg, June 5 to 11, the Pennsylvania Railroad Company will sell excursion tickets to Gettysburg from all stations on its line in the State of Pennsylvania, on June 4, 5, G, 7, and 8, good to return until June 13, inclusive, at rate of single fare for the round trip. For specific rates, ap ply to local ticket agents. 3133-14-11. Many a man neglects his family to pose as a public benefactor. Myitfrx of tlie Popular Morel. "We ore apt to think," says tke New York Evening Post, "that the selling of poor novels by the hundred thousand Is a modern phenomenon In the book trade; but, in fact, it is not entirely new. In one of the group of Haw thorne's letters he says: 'What is the mystery of these innumerable editions of"The Lamplighter" and other books neither better nor worse?—worse they could not be, and better they need not be when they sell by the hundred thousand.' The question is a little pa thetic when we remember that Haw thorne a little before this time had spoken of himself as tlie least read au thor in America. It shows, too, that the mystery of the popular novel was as great then as it is today. One could understand why a thrilling tale of cheaply concocted adventure might captivate the multitude, but the curi ou.s point is that some of the high sell ers are simply dull and respectable. These tilings, too, lie on the knees of the gods." A Stitch In the Side. A "stitch in the side'' is tlie popular and expressive term for a sharp stab felt in the side, an acute spasm, pro ducing pain, like the thrust of a needle, which is felt especially in the inter costal muscles. Probably its simplest form is due to muscular cramp con nected with respiration and frequently brought on by violent exercise after a full meal, in which there is a greater accumulation of carbonic acid than can be readily assimilated or carried off. Such slight stitch is often removed by stooping; hence the old time popular remedy was to make the sign of the cross upon the foot. Such a stitch is also associated with pleurisy, and then it is caused by a stretching of the not uncommon ad hesions between two pleuritic surfaces. At other times the source is neuralgia. In any case to persist in muscular ex ertion when the stitch is severe is to take a great risk. Credit Willi rnirnbrokfrn. That men can and do establish a line of credit with pawnbrokers is a prop osition beyond belief to the man who has been offered only S2O 011 a watch that cost $75. The fact remains, how ever, that all pawnbrokers have fa vored patrons on their books who can always get the amount of money they want upon almost any old thing that takes the shape of jewelry or other "hoekable" personal property. A lo cal sport tried to raise SSO 011 his split second stop watch the other day and was offered S3O less than the value of the case melted. A friend who has an established credit took the same watch to the same pawnbroker and got $75 011 it without a question be ing asked. It was the man, not the watch, that made the loan possible.— Philadelphia Record. Setting Her Iti^lit. Noah Webster, the learned compiler of the well known dictionary, was an unconventional man who loved his un conventional friends, but his wife was a stickler for propriety. Once, says the Idler, the good lady left home on what was supposed to be a prolonged visit, but some interference caused lier to re turn unexpectedly, and she found her husband in his shirt sleeves, holding carnival over strong waters in compa ny with a number of friends also in shirt sleeves. The shocked lady gazed at this disreputable gathering for a mo ment in silence. Then she said, "Well, lam surprised!" "No, my dear," said the lexicographer mildly, "I am sur prised. You are astonished." Ilait. Izaak Walton is the patron saint of all good fishermen. Here is his advice as to bait: "Let your bait be as big a red worm as you can find, without a knot. Get a pint or a quart of them in an evening in garden walks or chalky commons after a shower of rain, and put them with clean moss well washed and picked and the water squeezed out of the moss as dry as you can into an earthen pot or pipkin set dry, and change the moss fresh every three or four days for three weeks or a month together. Then your bait will bo at the best, for it will be clear and live ly." ■ trniiftc Provision of Gnnrdlunaliip. The following is a literal transcript of the second clause of a will filed and probated in a Wisconsin county a few years since: "I hereby commit the guardianship of ail my children until tin* shall respectively attain the age of twenty-one years unto my said wife during her life and from and aft er her decease unto my much esteem ed friend, , his executors and as signs."—Green Bag. A {freed. "I'd hate to feel," she said, "that I was the wife of a man who had bought me simply for my beauty." "Yes," lier friend replied. "I don't blame you. Being married to a blind man would be awfully disagreeable, I should think." Chicago Kecord-Her ald. Brnln and Brawn. Do you gain your living by your in tellect? Then do not allow your arms and legs to grow stiff. Do you earn your bread by your pickax? Do not forget to cultivate your mind and to enlarge your thought.—French Medical Review. Gtngrer. If every man would put as much gin ger into his work as a pig puts Into motion when it scratches its back against a board fence, there would be fewer failures in this world.—Utica Herald. Owing to the clearness of the air con versation i:> the arctic regions can be carried on by persons two miles apart. PMgjjTilPiP °n\ IBalcom & Lloyd. 1 I —1 | prepared I I For I hi | the Sedsoti || I! We have opened and are displaying a 11 L[ „ iii y choice line ol . . fji I FANCY 1 DRY GOODS I ifjjj I • I specially selected for the . . IM I Winter I • I j ™ Se&soi?. 1 P h M We have gathered such articles as B combine elegance with and utility at I Very Reasonable I If T \ • f} 1 rices ~ |ii I I Balcom 110 d - Wto_ _ r -- ) j '■ —: rij. n j frr J ten pjSj [gilS cX) norc;- V»:XMGAI^MIII 1 WJI W W IBIIIII I IPI Hl' II IWH '"I f Correct 1 I come •where correct fit B is a specialty. We are the sole agents lor the following Js §1 celebrated makes of clothing: Browning, King & Co. H of New York and Desbecker Block Tailoring Co., of II Buffalo, and a perfect fit is guaranteed. Yon will find the novelties of the season in the chidren's department. I Stylish and Serviceable Clothes I For the Little ones. Men's and Boys Hdts and Caps of the latest crea tions. Shirts in the newest spring styles. ~ Men's and Boys' Shoes in all styles. We are sole H agent for Waukerz shoes also Worth cushion sole shoes. I Jasper Harris, I | The People's Clothier.
Significant historical Pennsylvania newspapers