Rttflinens CartJu. bTw. ureen, attdbnby-at-law, Emporium. I'a. A builnMsrelaUn>rto estate,collection*. re*l ™t«t«s. Orphan's Court and coueraUaw bUNIDCBi ■arl] ] receive promptatteiitio». 42-ly. J. C. Jounsom. J. P. McNtnxn IOHNUON' A MoNARNEY, attornevb-at-law Emporium, Pa. Will (Ire prompt attention t• all business r»; routed to them. 18-1 y. mi AEITB RE NN AM, ~~ ATTOENEY-AT-LA'W Collections prejnptly attonded to. R.al mi«t« it*' 1 pension claifci agent, S5-ly. Emporium, Pa. THOMAS waddinoton, Emporium, Pa., CONTRACTOR FOR MAMONRY AND S TONE-CUTTING. All order* In my lino promptly eieouted. AU XJodsof hultdlnj aud cut-4to»«. *app «1 at 100 prices. Ac«ot for iuarfcle pr gi wait. ii.onuw.ntA Lettering neatly dona, .AMERICAN HOrBE, East Emporium, PtL.~ JOHN 1.. JOHNSON, I'rop'r, resumed proprietorship ©ftbl.old and well established Homo I mvitw ilic rationale ol heet Music, Emporium, Pa. !scholarstaughteitner at my home on Sixth 'Street or at the homes of the pupils. Outoftown scholars will be given date* ~c my rooms in thii place. 17, C. ftIECIC, D. D. S., DENTIST.; Oftlce over Taesrart's Drug Store, Emporium, Pa 112 Gas and other local anaesthetics ad s«Ks22Zaministered for the painless extracMos of teeth. "SPECIALTY:-- Preservation of Statural teelfc, Ie rUudiiitr Crown and Hriduc Wcrlk. NEW CAMERONHOUSE. Cameron. Pa., Opposite P. it E. Depot, HARRY McGKE, Proprietor. Having taken possession of this house and thoroughly remodeled and enlarged the building by erecting an addition of eighteen rooms, I am well prepared to meet the demands of the public. Guests conveyed to any part of the county. (Jood fishing and hunting in the immediate vicinity. KedoS DysjpopsEa Gase*© Digests what you «sn£. •* 1 « » - ■■■! ■ I ■ !■■■ ■■ .1, . ■■ ■■■■■ I ■■■■ . ■ ■ POPULAR SCENIC ROUTE. ; Buffalo & Susquehanna Railroad Company. Official Condensed Time T.ahle in Effect June 23, 1902. Sun- j j " day Week Days. Dailv Week Days. Only J P.M. P.M. P.M. A.M. ;A. M. STATIONS. A.M. P.M.' P.M. P. M. p. M? 6 10: 6 10; 11 10. 715 Lv Addison Ar 10 13. 443 641 511 11 41 801 Ulkland 941 411 546 546 II 46 HO6 Osceola , 936 4 0(1 555 555 11 55 822 Knoxvilie 9 '26 356 611 611 12 11 840 Westfleld 913 343 647 647 12 47 925 Gaines Junction 833 306 700 700 100 'J 40 Ar. $ . )Lv 500 10 20 Lv. } Galeton,. 823 253 535 740 540 P.M. P.M. 10 58 Ar Cross Fork Junction Lv 739 209 423 545 210 i 11 00 Lv. Cross Fork Junction Ar. *is oo 355 655 300 11 50 Ar. Cross Fork, Fa. Lv. 615 1 O'J 305 821 Q24P.M. A.M. 11 39, Ar Wharton Lv. 653 126 310 BDS 11 40, Lv Wharton Ar 10 53 j 300 A. M. 858 100 Ar Sinnamahoning I.v 95.5 j J4O 845 643 800 11 58 Lv Austin Ar 635 105 950 800 710 845 12 25 Ar Keating Summit Lv 12 40 910 7 30l '■ "■ P. M. A. M. I A. M P. M. A. M. P.M. A. M. P.M. P. M. A. M. 820 935 Lv . Ansonia Ar A «J"i *7 06' 835 9 Manhatten 9 n 4, 839 953 South Gaines, ~ c4O 842 955 •••••••••• ••OuincßJunction ur« <; -k 8551 009 Galeton Lv * $ g P.M. A.M. A.M. P.M. P. M. A. M. - p, M 105 630 '- v !,'. al ® ton Ar , 0 lu 455 124 647 •; Wa.ton .. »51 4 3!) 150 7 13 ISewneld Junction 0 2" 4IV i I 206 730 Wcrt Bingham g r ,g 4 o ', ! 2 741 Genesee 8 58S 352 224 740 • WllOUffO .. . . .. urq q47 j 2 10, BC6 Wellsvflle Lv 8 30 3 - M .. _ , CONNECTIONS. At Keating Summit with 11. & A. V. Div. of Pennsylvania R. R. At Ansonia with N.Y.C.A H It. R. for all points north and south. At Newtteld Junction with C. ii I'. A. Ry., Uniou Station. At Genesee with N. Y & Pa., Ry. Union Station. At Addison with Erie R. It., Union Station. At Wellsville with Erie It. R. for points east and west. At Sinnamahoning with P. R. R.—P. & K. Div. H. H. GARDINER, Gen'l Pass'r Agt. Buffalo, N.Y.| W. C. PARK. Gen'l Supt.. Galeton. Pa. M.J. Mc. MA 11 ON, Div. Pass Ag't., Galeton, Pa. G.SCHMIDT'S, 1 FOR M FRESH EREIAD, i gopalar 1 # ' " CONFECTIONERY Daily Delivery. Allordcrp given prompt and skillful attention, nvprim WHEN IN DOUET, TR/ They have stood the trst of yeas «r*H STROF3B &> > r& f//jsL's^ss!asisi£ 112 »e»m V- Pi l 3 rt lan afu 1&2&1 They clear the brain, strengthen r \ r the circulation, make digestion i <5.00. <5.00. „ttul lor book. Address, PEAL KEDICIiiE CO., Clsvsland. 0. | For sale by U. C. L)od9rn«Pri)gg]st,tEiuporiam.Pa» 5 TIMF. TABLE No. 27. COUDERSPORT &. PORT ALLFGANY R. R. Taking effect .Ma y 27th. HOI. BASTWA KD. 110 B|4 ] 6 I 2 STATIONS. 1 P. M P. M. A. M. A. M. Port Allegany... Lv. 3 15! 70S .... 11 M 6 Coleman, *3 23 j ° ' 1.... *ll 41 Burtville, *3 30 7 16 1147 Roulette, 3 40 ] 7 25 11 65 Knowlton's ..'1 45 .... 00 .... *ll 59 Mina. i 3 50 ! 7 35 12 05 Olmsted •( 05 *7 38 ..... *l2 Oil Hammonds, 00 1 00 "12 13 Coudersr-ort / Ar 4 20 A. M. 7 « 12 15 L er »port. j l v 6 1() 000 100 North C'oudersport, '<>ls "1 05 Frln k's, 6 25 »6 10 *ll2 ColesburK, , -6 40 "G 17 120 Seven Bridges •(! 45 ..... *6 21 *1 '.>4 Raytnonds's *7 00 *6 30 1 ,'is Gold 705 030 141 Newfleld 00 1 45 NewfleldJunction, 737 ..... t> 4 r > 150 1 Perkins, "7 40 'II 18 *1 53 , Carpenter's 7 4li 10 "1 57 Crow-ell's 7 50... *6 53 *2Ol I Ulysses, Ar 805 705 210 i A. M.! ! ! P. M. I WHTWAID. _ | 1 5 7 3 r STATIONS. A. M. p. M. A. M : Ulysses Lv. 720 225 !> '0 Crowell's "7 27 *2 32 • 9 19 Carpenter's, 00 '2 31 •9 22 Perkins *7 82 »2 37 * 9 2« NewfU'MUunction, 7 ,'l7 242 932 Newfleld, *7 41 2 10 Gold. 741 249 940 Raymond's *7 49 2 54 * 947 Seven Bridges *8 01 »3 OH *lO 02 ~.., ColesburK, *8 Ot 3 03* lO 10 Frink's *8 12 »ri 17 *lO 20 I North Coudersport, " 326 *lO 35 .. . lAr. 8 25 3 30 10 45 \ Coudersport < p.m.i 1 (Lv S2B fl 00 1 20 ; ITainnionds, 03 00 00 : Olmsted, *8 88 *0 05 *1 31 \ Mina, 837 6 10, 1 37 | Knowlton's, 110 »g 17' 00 Be ilette 817 c2l ISI i Burtville. 854 G2B 201 j Coleman, i H3l 00 ! Pot t Allegany 808 r> 40 2 25i (*) Fin- stations. (°°) Trains do not stop ♦ t Teltßraph offlees. Train Nos. 3 and 10 will carry put-sciigers. Tains 8 anrl 10 do. Trains run on Eastern Standard Time. Connections—At Ulysses with Fall Brook R'y ; for points north and south. At It. & S. June- ! lion with Buffalo ,V Susquehannaß. R. north lor Wellsville, south for Galeton and Ansonia. At Port Allegany with \V. N. V.A P. H. R., north for l>nll:uo. Ole.in, Bradford and ; iinelhport; south for Keating Summit, Austin, Emporium and I'enn'a R. It., points. B. A. McCLURE •icn'lSupt. Coudersport, Pa. | The Place to B:iy Cheap J. F. PARSONS' < BlgjSqS Dyspepsia €^o Diaasis what you cat. Foley's Kidney Cure tiakes kidneys and bladder right, i j. BANNER SAL VF. ' in?»' !-.«aiing salve in tho world- CAMERON COUNTY PRESS, THURSDAY, AUGUST 25, 1904. —~—ygr— ■ ■■' —e—J r The St. Louis World's i Fair as a Great* Educator PJ It Is More Valuable Than Months of Study or a Trip Around 0 the World. Accommodations for Visitors Moderate and Ample l! [j St. Louis.—l was standing 011 the Plaza St. Louis, admiring the scene that stretched away into the distance before mo, ending with the magnificent spectacle of the Cascades. I needed no company, for the great exposition ail around me was sufficient, but as I stood there an acquaintance, the president of a western college, stopped beside me. "Magnificent beyond tbo dream of man," said I. "More than that," said he. "Do you know,"he continued, "to me the great est thing of this truly great exposi tion is the educational influence it will have upon the millions who visit it. Here in two weeks' time one can gain more practical knowledge of the kind that "tvill be useful to him in the strug gle with the world than he can get in two years' time in any university. The college education is entirely different from the kind of education one gets by seeing things, but for practical pur poses the 'seeing* education is quite as ; necessary as the book learning. We 1 consider a trip to Europe as a great I educator, but a trip to Europe cannot I be compared to a trip to this exposi AS AVEIIAGE CROWD ON THE "I'IKK" AT THE WORLD'S PAIR. lion. Here is shown the best of all countries, and to see all that is shown here is to see the best from the coun tries of all the world. "As for our country, what could be more instructive than the exhibits in our government building? After seeing it we understand far better than we could have before both the system and uses of government. Take the Philip pine exhibit as another example. A half day's time spent within its walls is more instructive than a dozen text books. We are entirely too apt to read and forget, but when we see we re member, and here we see." Examples that would bear out the statements of my college friend might be enumerated almost without end, ar.d all would but tend to prove that the Louisiana Purchase exposition is the greatest educator of the age. We read the histories of the years to learn of the world's progress, but here we do not have to read, we see it. In the Transportation building we see the primitive locomotives that pulled our first railroad trains, and standing be side them we see the powerful, intri cate machines that perform the same service to-day. That is an education | in the progress of railroading. In the | Electrical building we find the first primitive electrical appliances, and be side them the many intricate machines that are to-day being driven by this as yet unexplained power. That is up to-date education in electricity. In our school geographies we are taught, among other things, of the products of the various countries. Here we see them. The book learning we forget, v/hat we see we remember. Take, for example, Japan. We are interested in the progress of the island empire, we wonder at her greatness, we read vol ume after volume to learn of her progress. Here it is all spread out be fore our eyes. We see the same Japan Commodore Perry saw when he broke the bars of darkness that shut the em pire from the world, and we see beside it the Japan that is to-day waging war with one of the greatest nations of the world, the same Japan that is an im portant element in the world's com merce. It is an education in the prog ress of Japan that no books can pos sibly give us. And so it goes through all {lie great exposition palaces, through the foreign government buildings, through the state buildings, and down the Pike. Everywhere is a new and valuable les son easily learned and never forgotten, lor we learn it by "seeing." To refer agaitj to the United States government building and its exhibits as an educational feature, I want to quote a part of a paragraph from the ' current number of the World's Work that well illustrates the educational 1 point I make. This is it: "Watch a party of visitors from a J Mississippi valley state, people who 1 have never seen the sea, as they wan dor through the passages of the battle ship model or squint along a rapid-fire ' gun on deck, across an imaginary ocean. The shine in iheir oyer, betrays a mixture of excited interest and pa trioUc pride. Far though the coast ttia.y be from their kume3, it is yet their coast that such battleships guard, and the battleships are theirs. And it is a semi-proprietary satisfaction that affords a good part of the pleas ure that any American evinces in gaz ing at the processes or results of the many government activities he sees ex ploited here. A visitor will observe a hundred interesting novelties; he will leave the building—only togo back later for another look—round-eyed with amazement at the many things tJie government does for the people; but his spirit will be self-gratulatory— it is we who are doing it all." Yet another among ihe thousand of exhibits that may be classed as edu cational is to bo found in every aisle, in every corner of the Agricultural building. Here spread out before you are the products of the earth's harvest fields. In this one building, big enough in itself to contain the whole of tho Pan-American exposition at Buffalo, | are the farm products of every coun \ try. Here are sheaves of grain and | heaps of corn, made opulent with milk ; nnd honey and butter, cotton-seed oil ] and cotton, tobacco, sugar cane, and fruit. There arc towers and pagodas and pictures and panoramas in corn husks, corn-cobs, corn-tassels and corn kernels, tobacco-leaves and tobacco grains, wheat-straw and wheat-heads and wheat-grains; ar.d there are fig ures in cotton and butter and sugar and prunes and nuts. There are dec orations in wavy moss and hemp, in rice-sheaves and prairie grasses. You know at last the wealth of each state for packed into each of the different sections is an abundant sample of all that springs from one state's soil— whether it be hill-farm potatoes, swamp rice, sea-island cotton, bottom land corn, prairie wheat, desert dates or irrigated alfalfa. And in the same way you know the agricultural wealth of each of the world's nations, for they are spread out before you for your in spection. Everything grown upon the earth is here, and displayed and la beled so that the lesson the exhibit teaches is never forgotten. And what does it cost to see this wonderful exposition, what is the price to be paid for this liberal edu cation? It may be much or little, just ■ as a sight-seeing trip to any city may !be much or little. There are fashion ! able, high-priced hotels in St. Louis, just as there are in New York, in Chi cago, in London or any other large city, but be it said to the credit of these hotels, thoy are no higher priced during te exposition than they were before it. The massea of -the people are looking, however, for something j less expensive, and it is easily found. The people of St. Louis are playing the part of host in a way that will make friends of the visitors to the fair. Thousands of homes have been opened for the accommodation of guest*, and the prices charged for the accommoda tions provided are most moderate. In fact, to judge from what one must pay for board and room, one would scarce ly imagine that the greatest exposition the world has ever known is in prog ress In the city. Hoarding house price? compare favorably with those of othei cities, and $1 per day will secure a comfortable room and breakfast ir hundreds of these hospitable homes No one needs deprive himself of th< great education that awaits him ai St. Louis for fear of exorbitant pricas, for they are not to be found. Two Injuries. Perhaps the man who maltreats a book, even by acctdent, deserves to pay for it twice over, and logically he maj sometimes be called upon to do It. A daily newspaper says that a borrower re cently handed in a book at a public lend ing library, and the attendant thereupon discovered a hole in one of the leaves. It was necessary to enter a description of the damage In a book kept on the coun ter. A clerk entered the title and num ber of the book, and the attendant de scribed the damage thus: "Page 215, a hole." Then he turned the l«af and added: "Page 218, an other hole."—Youth's Companion. In lialrota. "Who is that man she's flirting with so desperately?" "That's her first husband."—Chicago American. & LOOK ELSEIWHERF BUT DON ' T ""GETthese £ H luur 110 l nl n r. prices and facts at y ILABAR'S Jjj, 1 s.'{o s.'{o Bedroom Suits, solid $25 S4O Sideboard, quartered CQQ >' ' J ' I^\ S2B Bedroom Suits, solid <£ll §32 Sideboard, quartered fi' Mmsl kinds ever brought W ft? j to Emporium. Also a big # $ 1j ? If\\wf ver y ar .? e li ,ie of n 1 112 ,"ll!L V.';j ace Curtains that can- *Cj j*' r " Ut inalC^ an y vvhere & rt S 'j! iares an( * $ ( ' l '' t ' R " clu ' al ' cst l ° tllc E' ' K ft A large and elegant line of Tufted and Drop-head & # Couches. Beauties and at bargain prices. t "7~~ ~~ ' — : —— fe Q? The finest line of Sewing Machines 011 the market, K the "Domestic" and "Eldredge". All drop heads and W n > warranted. M rf A fine line of Dishes, common grade and China, in ft sets and by the piece. ' $ $ As I keep a full line of everything that goes to make & W up a good hurniture store, it is useless to enumerate them & a"- 4 U Please call and see for yourself that lam telling you J~L the tiutli, and if you don't buy, there is 110 harm done, as A, *rT it is 110 trouble to show goods. | GEO. J. La BAR. | >: ;;sG«C3£occs&3£ & | Balcom & Lloyd. | I h . —— § Iprepared I I r ° r 1 1 the Se&sonl fr | I ▼ ;y We have opened and are displaying a p3 |j l choice line of . . vl; fjFANCY | SDRY GOODS I ill m [jjj specially selected for the . . 1 1 • 1 I SsdSOtf. J]; m 11 j' j We have gathered such articles as ]J combine elegance with ylj J| and utility at jf I Very Reasonable I 'III T \ • ! ' f} incevS I j" pj| I Balcom & Lloyd, p i BJ Si ,-aEigjaiEter, && 7