Cameron County press. (Emporium, Cameron County, Pa.) 1866-1922, July 26, 1906, Image 4

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    Gidmcror) JfWss. j
ESTABLISHED BY C. B.GOULD.
HENRY H. MULLIN,
Editor and Manager.
L'ITBLISU ED EVER? THURSDAY
T E RM S OF SU BBCRIPTIO N:
Per year * 2 00
pAid ie advance $l5O |
ADVEHTISING RATES.
Advertiseiuentsarepublishedat the r ate ofone
iollar per square for one insertion an»i tifty cents i
»»er square for each subsequent insertion.
Rates by t he year or for six or th ree months are
low and uniform, and will befurpishea on appli
cation t , _
Legal and Official Advertising persauare.three |
times or less, $2 00; each subsequent liiserUonftQ
ceuts per square.
Local noticesten cents per line for oneinsertion, (
live cents per line for eacnsubsequentconsecutive
Insertion. , .
Obituary notices over five lines, ten cents per
lino. SimpleannouncementsofbirlnP, marriages
a ufl deaths will be inserted free.
Business Cards, five lines or 1 •>s $5.00 per year
over live lines, at the regular rates of advertising
No local Inserted for less than 75 cts. per issue.
JOB PRINTING.
The Job department of the PRESS is complete, j
aud affords facilities for doing the best class of
work. PARTICULAR ATTENTION PAID TO Law
Printing. ,
No paper willbc discontinued until arrearages
are paid, except at the option ofthe publisher.
Papers sent out ofthecounty must be paid for
in advance.
advertisements will be accepted at lew
han the price for fifteen words,
a.-Religious notices free. j
KKPI lII.U AN STATIv TICKET.
GOVERNOR Edwin S. Stuart, Philadelphia.
LIEUTENANT GOVERNOR—Robert S. Mur- |
phy, Cambria county.
AUDITOR GENERAL—Robert K. Young, I
Tioga county.
SECRETARY OF INTERNAL AFFAIRS— j
Henry Houck, Lebanon county.
COUNTY TICKET.
For Congress,
CHARLES F. BARCLAY, Cameron.
Por President Judge,
BENJAMIN W. tIREEN, Cameron.
|Subject to Judicial Conference.]
For Member of Assembly,
JOS IAH HOWARD, Emporium.
For Associate Judge,
GEORGE J. LABAR, Emporium.
For Prolhonotary. Register, Recorder and Clerk j
of Courts,
WILLIAM J. LEAVITT, Shippen.
For District Attorney,
JAP. P. McNARNEY, Emporium.
For Coroner,
DR. W. S. RUSSELL, Gibson.
For Jury Commissioner,
JOHN A. WYKOFF, Grove.
That Emery Letter.
The Wanamaker interests I
through the Philadelphia North
American .scolds its nominee for |
writing the Likins letter. IT said '
on Saturday:
' Mr. Emery's letter is much too
long, it rambles where it should j
have been terse, and it says many
things which had better have been
loft UU&iid for the advantage of the j
writer and the cause.
Mr. Emery will do well, we
think, to accept for himself in the
future, Quay's advice to Beaver.''
To Republicans.
We are anxious to have every
Republican in close touch, and
work in harmony with the Repub
lican National Congressional Com- j
mitt in favor of the election of a
Republican Congress.
The Congressional campaign
must be based on the administra
tive and legislative record of the
party, and, that being so, Theo
dore Roosevelt's personality must j
be a central figure and his achieve- j
ments a central thought in the J
campaign.
We desire to maintain the work j
of this campaign with popular sub- '
soriptions of One Dollar each from j
Republicans. To each subscriber I
we will will -end the Republican I
National Campaign Text Book and I
all documents issued by the Com- I
in ittee.
JAMKS S. SHERMAN, Chairman.
P. (). Box, 20<»-i, New York.
Docs evil still, your whole life till?
Does woe betide?
Your thought- abide on suicide?
i'ou need a pill!
Now for prose and facts—l)cWitt's I
Little Early Risers are the most pleasant I
and reliable pills known to-day. They
never gripe. Sold by 11. C. Dodson.
Rheumatism Cured in Ten Days.
Why Will You Suffer.
Mr. Harry Knox, of Beverly, W. Va.,
under date of Jan. 23, 1906, says he was
laid up with rheumatism for more than
two and a half months; part of the time
could not set out of bed. Could not !
walk with out the aid of crutches, and |
Bays he took one-half of a 50 cent bottle j
of Crocker's Rheumatic Cure and was j
entirely eured. HARRY KNOX.
Fcr sale by R. C. Dodson. 21juni5m. |
Saved His Comrade's Life.
'-Wbile returning from the Grand
Army Encampment at Washington City, j
a comrade from Elgin 111 , was taken with
cholera morbus and was in a critical con
dition," says Mr. J. E. Houghlaud, of j
Kldcn lowa. "I gave him Chamber-
Lia's Colic, Cholera and Diarrhoea Rem
edy and believe saved his life. I have
been engaged for ten years in immigra
tion work and conducted many parties to
the south and west. I always carry this
remedy and have used it successfully on
many evasions Sold by L. Taggart;
J. E. Smith, Sterling Run; Crum Bros.
Slanatnahoning.
DfnTrr'« Klrmt Sf«n*cn«oh,
On the 17th of May, IS.*>',), Denver
turned out to welcome the first through
coach of what was destined to grow
into the "Overland Mail," nn enterprise
which lor sheer American pluck and
daring must lie forever linked with the
■fame of the "Pony Express." lied
shirts drifted to the outskirts ol Hie
hamlet and dotted the hills around.
Hard faced bartenders made ready for
the "hottest night that ever tore the
camp loose." The artillery of holster
and saddle boot was uuliuibercd for an
ecstatic fusillade. There was lively
betting in dust aud nuggets that the
i first through stage had been gathered
in by Indians, with takers as eager to
■ stake their faith that the scalps of
| driver and guard would come through
I intact. At length a swirl of dust show
ed far down the trail. It grew into a
; yellow cloud that crept toward the
j eager hamlet. Then six mules, stretch
i ed out ou the gallop, emerge I irom
tills curtain, and behind them was the
lumbering, swaying stage, come safely
I through on time, aud Denver was in
; touch with the world where men wore
i white shirts and lived in real houses.
The cheers that roared a welcome to
this heroic enterprise were .echoed in
i every western town which hoped and
1 longed for a link of its own with the
home country, "way back east."—Out
| iiig Magazine.
Tlio Polite llurniHii.
In the cities of Burma, where the
i natives have been long in contact with
j Europeans, says the author of "Bur
• ma, Painted and Described," they have
lost some of their traditional polite
i ness, but in the country districts old
school courtesy Is still the custom. An
| English gentleman who had bought a
[ new pony was trying him out on a
] Burman road when the animal bolted
, and ran at top speed down a narrow
I road. In the way ahead was si native
I cart, in which was a family party out
1 holiday making. The pony dashed Into
' the back of the cart, threw his rider
j into the midst of the merrymakers and
i severely injured the Burman who was
\ driving. Before the Englishman had
| an opportunity to explain his uuexpect
; ed onslaught the Burman picked lilni
i self up and bowed low. "My lord,
! my lord," he said apologetically, "the
I eart should not have been there."
Inlirrited Meiuorlm,
j A writer in (lie Nineteenth Century
j tells a strange story of "inherited
j memories." The ruins of an ancient
| Roman fortress rise from the grounds
!of a Mr. Phillips. A clergyman called
j upon the owner one day and asked to
| see the ruins. "He told me he had a
i distinct recollection of living there and
I that he held some office of a priestly
j nature in the days of the Ilomau occu
' pation," said Mr. Phillips. "One fact
| struck me as significant. He insisted
| on examining a ruined tower which
j had bodily overturned. 'There used to
J b? a socket in the top of It,' he went
on, 'ln which we used to plant a mast,
and archers used to lie hauled to tlie
top in a basket protected with leather,
from which they picked oft .the lead
ers among the ancient <Jorlestonians.'
We found the socket he had indicated."
When Pari* Wan Dirty.
It takes the labors of 4,000 to keep
j the city of Paris clean today, but in
i times past that capital did not care so
j much about the matter and was not
always pleasing to look upon. In 1348
King John of France made the request
that Parisians should nof allow tlieir
pigs to roam the streets. Charles VI.
(130S-14221 complained that the prac
tice of throwing rubbish into the Seine
made it a "great horror and an abom-
I ination to look upon." Until the sev
| teentli century everybody who could
| went about Paris on horseback in order
j to avoid contact with the filth of the
| streets. Various ordinances were made
! to compel the people to sweep the road
before their own doors, but it was not
until 1791 that the dust cart became nn
| institution.
A liullnby.
Magistrate—You are accused of at
tempting to hold a pedestrian up at 2
o'clock tills morning. What have you
j to say in your own behalf?
' Prisoner—l am not guilty, your hon
| or. I can prove a lullaby,
j Magistrate—You mean an alibi.
Prisoner—Well, call it what you like,
j but my wife will swear that I was
j walking the floor ■with the baby at the
| hour mentioned in the charge.—Chica
i go News,
on l'rieiidnhlii.
Friends are a costly luxury, and
when one invests one's capital in a
mission In life one cannot afford to
have friends. The expensiveness of
friendship does not lie in what one
does for one's friends, but in what one,
out of regard for them, leaves undone.
This means the crushing of many an
intellectual germ.—From n Letter to
George Brandes.
JllHl 1.1 k r Him.
I Arthur—-You think 1 don't love you,
! flarling? Why, I would die for you.
I Arethusa—Yes,, and it would be just
like you to do it so that your funeral
| would come on a day when I had to
give up a renl ulee engagement to at
tend it. Oh, you men are so selfish!
Sa«l.
First Baby—You look sad.
Second Baby—l am. I feel keenly
j the responsibility of having parents
i wh# cannot afTord to have me.—Smart
i Set.
Hrlied III* ( haae*.
Miss Prlui —ln Siberia do they have
reindeer? Mr. N'ervey—Yes, but often
er they have snow, darling.—Cleveland
Lender
He who does not improve today will
grow worse tomorrow Oerman ProY-
CAMERON COUNTY PRESS, THURSDAY, JULY 26, 1906.
Enrrhqiinkeft.
Among the many strange relation
ships which earthquakes hold to vaii
ou.s natural phenomena there is possl
bly one between (he times of their oe
currence and of irregularities In the
revolution of the world. For many
years it hns been observed that there
are slight but Irregular changes in lati
tude, or, in other words, the axis of our
cartli does not always point in the
same direction. The pole wanders
about lu a mean position, sometime?!
Ui a path that is nearly circular, while
at others It appears to in- exceedingly
Irregular and even retrograde. The
world top Is not spinning truly, hut it
slightly wabbles. When the change In
direction of its axis Is sharp large
earthquakes have been frequent. If a
swiftly moving body is, so to speak,
compelled to turn a corner, that it
should be subjected to strains which
might result in yielding is easily con
ceivable. Regarded from this point of
view, thi- times at which strata in
seismic strain give way are to some
extent governed by erratic movements
in the rotation of our sphere. The
earthquake and the wabble may, how
ever. be due to a common cause, and
the question therefore is one which re
quires closer examination.—John Milne
in National Review.
A (<oo<l llorMo'.i Color.
A good horse cannot be a bad color.
It is said. It is certain that Derby
winners are not drawn from certain
colors, lias a gray ever won the race,
or a dun or a skewbald or a piebald?
lias there ever been a thoroughbred of
the latter type? Quite black thorough
breds are rare, white still more so,
gray uncommon even among the less
exalted of public performers. The
"Stud Hook" would not bear out these
statements where colors uncommon on
the race course are described. The ex
planation K of course, that the horse
is there described us be appeared as a
foal. An owner of a bay thoroughbred
looked up the "Stud Rook" to find his
purchase pictured as a chestnut and
complained to the men of whom he
had bought the horse. The former
owner assured hiin that the descrip
tion was correct at the time it was en
tered. Other owners, less certain as to
what color may appear when the first
coat has been cast, have before now
made such singular entries as "gray,
roan or chestnut." St. James' «Jazette.
Tile Poronplne'n <iuiils.
The spines are very loosely attached
to the porcupine, and they arc very
sharp— as sharp as a needle at the
outer end. At almost the slightest
touch they penetrate the nose of a dog
or the clothing or flesh of a person
touching the porcupine and stick there,
coming away from the animal without
any pull being required. The facility
in catching hold with one end and let
ting go with the other has sometimes
caused people to think that the spines
had been thrown at them. The outer
end of the spines, for some distance
down, Is covered with small barbs.
These barbs cause a spine once imbed
ded in a living animal to keep working
fartl*er in with every movement of the
muscles, so that it is not a pleasant
thing to get stuck full of them.
A Had Picture,
At Varzin once, after sitting for some
time sunk in profound reflection. Ris
marck lamented that he had derived
but small pleasure or satisfaction from
his political activity, but, on the other
hand, much vexation, anxiety and trou
ble. lie had, he said, made 110 one
happy by it. neither himself, his family
nor any one else, "but probably," he
continued, "many unhappy. Ilad It not
been for me there would have been
three great wars the less, the lives of
80,000 men would not have been sac
rificed and many parents, brothers, sis
ters and widows would not now he
mourners."—"Bismarck's Table Talk."
Unique It n!:i making.
One of the oldest rainmaklug plants
is the invention of a native of oue of
the Indian provinces. Tsy means of a
rocket he sends more than a mile into
the air a reservoir of ether attached to
a parachute. This, being released at
the highest point, floats gently back to
earth, the condensation being caused
by the evaporation of the ether. It is
said to be decidedly etlieacious even
where there is scarcely a trace of
cloud.
Cat It.
"Yes," said the college student, "dad
got the idea that I was cutting up too
much, and so he cut lu and threatened
to cut down my allowance unless I
took a brace. I felt all cut up at first,
but I didn't want my allowance cut
hff or cut Into just for a little funny
business, and so I cut It out." And
the listening foreigner remurked,
"What did the young man say?"—Som
erville Journal.
Brraklnc It Gently.
Captain of Steamer—Madam, it gives
me great pain to be obliged to tell you
that your little boy's hat has blown
overboard. Fond Mother—'Why, I
thought It was tied on with a string!
Captain—Yes. That was just the
trouble. The string did not break.
Corrected.
"Miss Isabel, you are not at all like
other girls."
"That is not a compliment, Mr.
Bpooner. You should say that other
girls are not at all like me."
((<lte Proper.
Little Rollo- Pop, what is an up
right piano? l'op—Oue that plays only
sacred music, my son.—Woman's Home
Companion.
Wot i OBCfltrd.
She—All men are conceited. He —Not
all. I see a man every day who is not
conceited. She—Where? He—ln th*
mirror.
.
It's Easy
I to write a good letter when
your paper, pens and ink are
i r.'l friendly.
' Eaton-Hurlbut
Writing Papers
J the "PAPERS THAT APPEAL,"
I make polite correspondence a
I pleasure. Most people just
J now are asking us for Twotone
| and Highland Linen. There
are other styles you may like
even better. Come in and see
them.
M. A. ROCKWELL,
DRIGMNr,
Emporium, !•«.
"DRIES IN'IO'MINUTES
If your dealer hasn't it, F. V. Heil
man has.
Register's Notice.
STATE OF PENNSYLVANIA, > S A
COUNTY OF CAMEHOK. (
"VfOTICE is hereby given that V. A. Brooks,
Administrator of the estate of David
A. Fulton, late of Gibson township, deceased,
has filed his account of his administration of the
said estate and the same will be presented to the
Orphans Court at July term, next for confirma
tion ni ni.
C.J. GOODNOUGH, Register.
Register's Office, !
Emporium, Pa., June 4th. l'JOti. I 17--U.
JS The Laßelle
For Women $2.50
No other modern design so fully meets all the
requirements of the ideal ladies shoe. It
is an uneaqualed combination of style and fit.
shapeliness and comfort. The high but rather
broad heal, arched instep and slightly manish
appearance makes it the swellest sort for the
feet.
If you are a victim of faulty slioes.we can soon
enable you to walk with ease and comfort,
and eventually cure your tender feet. These
shoes will wear twice as long as the ordinary
"ready made" shoes and have a style and fin
ish that is essentially distinctive.
Walker's
$4.00 For Men !
CHARLES DIEHL,
The Up-to-Date Store.
1 Watch for our
Ad. Next
Week.
I
MasperH^