fcSl IRHEUMATISMI ■ LUMBAGO, SSilTlCll BNEURALQiS and! ■KIDNEY TROUBLE I |§|a * 5 DROPS" taken internally, rids tbe blood H H or the poisonous matter and acids which ■ HR are tbe direct causes of these diseases. 85 Applied externally it affords almost in-■ ■■ &tant relief froiu pain, while a permanent H m cure Is beintf effected by purifying the blood, dissolving tbe poisonous sub- ■ Biar.ee and removing it from tbe system. DR. S. D. BLAND I Of Brew ton# Ga.. write#: S •'1 tad beon a sufferer for a number of year® with LumbaKo and Ktu-uroatlnnj In my arnia and leg?, and tried all tbe remedies tbat I could M gathtr from medical works, and also consulted with a number of the beet physicians. but found nothing that gave the relief obtained from ••6-DROPB." I shall prescribe It In my practlo* H for rheumatism and kindred diseases." f?P FREEI If you are suffering with Rheumatism, H Neuralgia. Kidney Trouble or any kln-H dred disease, wri 10 to us tor a trial bottle WM of "»-DROPS." end test It yourself. ■ "S-DROPS" can be used any length of ■ time without acquiring a "drug habit." ■ as It Is entirely free of opium, cocaine, ■ alcohol, laudanum, and other almilarH Ingredients. : m Large Hlir Dottle, ••6-DBOPB" (800 Dote.) H • 1.00. for Sale by l>ruff!iti. w SWANSOS IHEUMATIB OURE COMPASY, ■ Dept. HO. 160 Lake Street* Chicago. ■ CHICHESTER'S ENGLISH PENNYROYAL PILLS DIAMOND BRAND pi o° V )$ 3 - LADIES ! Ask your Druggist for A CHI-CHES-TER'S PILLS in RED and AOv i ics, sealed with Blu< (w J Ribbon. TAKE NO OTHER. Buy of your \/ /Druggist and ask for CIII-CIIES-TEH'S v ENCI.ISII I'ILLH, the DIAMOND IJUAND, lor (twenty-live years known :is Best, Safest, Al ' w:.\ s Reliable. Sold by Druggists every where. CHICHESTER CHEMICAL CO., PHIL A., X'A. SDR. CALDWELL'S tt E YRUP PEPStN CURES CONSTIPATION, A V | Auturnn jj 1 II 1 The highest type of clothing for men, young men and boys. Nothing less will do for this age of high ideals. It is such clothing that is here to-day to be seen and tried on. We es pecially invite the skeptical man. Examine it, compare it, test it in any way that you H may. Then you will appre % ciate its value. ff In our departments fall lines of ? a underwear, hosery, hats, caps | S shoes, trunks, suit cases, are 1 H well stocked. I H We are sole agents for the Jj Stetson Hats, Crawford Shoes 112 Sand Desbecker Block Tailor- -i" a ing Co. All the above named gj firms cannot be beat for stvles g§ and wear. I Jasper Harris, E | Opposite Post-Office, Emporium, Pa. Register's Notiee. ' STATE OF PF.NNSYI.V ANIA, / J COUNTY OF GAUBBOH, 4 VTOTICK is hereby given that James Haley _i\ Administrator of Patrick Haley, deceased late of the Borough of Emporium, has filed his first and final account of his administration of the said estate and the same will be presented to Die Orphan's Court at December term, next for confirmation ni Hi. C. J. GOODNOUGH, Register. Register's Office, \ Emporium, Pa., Nov. 19tli, 1900. { UMt. I Register's Notice. STATKOK PENNSYLVANIA,),,,. CAMERON COUNTY, I N OTICE is hereby given that Elmer E. Klock, Administrator of the estate, of Anna I). Mc- Connell, late of the Borough of Emporium de ceased. has filled his first and final account of his administration of the said estate and the same will be presented to the Orphan's Court ftt December term next for conli rniation ni si. C. J. GOODNOUGH, Register. Register's Office, i Emporium, Pa., Nov. 19th, 1900. < 44-4t. SheriflPs Sale. T_)Y VIRTUE of a writ of Fitri Facias J 3 issued out of the Court of Common Pleas, of Cameron county, and to me directed, I have seized, levied upon and taken into execution and will expose to sale and sell by public vendue or outcry, at the Court House,in Emporium, Cam eron county Pennsylvania, on Friday, lltli Hay of l>w. A. !>., 190(5, AT 2:OOO'CLOCK, P. M„ All that certain piece, parcel and tract of land situate, Iviug and being in the Borough of Em porium, County of Cameron and State of Penn sylvania bounded and described us follows, viz: Commencing at a point on the northerly side of Allegheny Avenue being the south west corner of Lot No. 849; thence extending westerly along the north line of Allegheny Avenue 82 feet to a point: thence northerly at right angles to the said north line of said Allegheny Avenue and parallel with the west line of lot No. 619, 240 feet to a point on the south lineof Fifth street; thence southeast wardly along said southerly line of Fifth street, 82 feet to the northwest corner of lot No. 049; thence southerly along the west line of lot No. 649, 240 feet to the place of beginning, being all of lot No. 648 and a strip 32 feet in width from the easterly side of lot No. 647 in block No. 79 as laid down on the general plan of the Phila delphia and Erie Land Company and bounded northerly bv Fifth street, easterly by lot No. 649. southerly by Allegheny Avenue and westerly by the balance of lot No. 647, being the premises conveyed by Le Grande Cook, of Shippen Town ship, Cameron county, Pennsylvania to Annie E. Hamilton by deed dated January 16th, 190 Sand recorded in Cameron county in deed book "S" page 113, having thereon erected one large three story frame hotel building known as Cook's Hotel, barn, horse sheds, chicken house and other necessary outbuildings with city water and gas, Seized, taken into execution and to be sold as the property of Annie E. Hamilton and M. F. Hamilton at the suit of William S. Walker, Executor of the last will and testament ofGeorge A. Walker, deceased. TERMS CASH. No deed will be executed until j the purchase price is paid in full. JOHN D. SWOPE, Sheriff of Cameron County. Sheriffs Office, 1 . Emporium, Pa., Nov. 21st, 1906. j / lOUET PROCLAMATION.— WHEBEAS: -The V / Hon. U. W. GREEN, President Judge and the Hons. JOHN MCDONALD and GEO. J.LABAR, Associate Judges of Courts of Oyer and Terminer and General Jail Delivery, Quarter Sessions of ' the Peace, Orphans' Court and Court of Common Pleas for the county of Cameron have issued their precept bearing date the 27th day of Oct. : A. I)., 1906, and to me directed for holding Court of Oyer and Terminer, General Jail De livery, Quarter Sessions of the Peace, Orphans' j Court, at\d Court of Common Pleas in the Borough of Emporium, Pa., on Monday, the 1 17tli day ol December, 1906, at 10 o'clock, a. m. t and to continue one week. Notice is hereby given to the Coroners, Justices of the Peace and Constables within the county, that they be then and therein their proper per sons, at 10 o'clock, a. m., of said day, with their rolls, records, inquisitions, examinations, and other rememberances. todo those things which to their offices appertain to Idone. And those who are bound by their recognizance to prosecute j against them as will be just. I Dated at Emporium, Pa., November 20th, l:> 06, and in the 130 th year or the Independence of the United States of America. J. D. SWOPE, Sheriff. CAMERON COUNTY PRESS, THURSDAY, DECEMBER 13 KJO6 CHRISTMAS EVE IN PARIS. in t'Mij u<» S«-«'imvs at tin* .Madeleine, Historic Frrnrli Cliurcli. They drove to the Madeleine through streets already full of life and move ment of hurrying crowds, darting fig ures now plunged in the black shad ows and now slipping out into the full glare of the clustered lights. Tlie big perspective of the Place de la Con corde, thickly sown with lamps, was shot through with glistening reflections from the tops of carriages, the arcade of the Hue de Itlvoli was hrllllqnt as a stage setting, the hotels In the broad Rue Uoyale were ablaze with light, and far at the end of the street, where the lofty portico of the Madeleine showed clear against the starry sky, a hundred sparks twinkled from the eabs flitting ulong the boulevard. The steady roll of wheels merged with the varying notes of horns in motors and the sound of talk and laughter from the sidewalks, and all blended lu a great humming symphony, struck through with the rattling, syn copated clack-clack of hoofs upon the asphalt, like the staccati of sharp drums. The crowd at the Madeleine was al most Impassable, but somehow they gained the steps, the vestibule* and were swept in the solid pack of meu and women through the door at the right. The great tloor was filled with a throng ns varied as I'nris itself. Piety and the idlest curiosity, youth and age, came together. As the pro cession came in sight its song was joined by the organ in the sanctuary, and the music rose louder and fuller lu a single godlike voice ranging down from the dazzling altar. Suddenly, like artillery, the great or gan overhead crashed out in a volume of sound that flooded the whole vast interior like a wave, sweeping over the heads of the kneeling crowd and mounting to the shadowy arches of the roof. The very concussion took the listeners' breath away, and in the recoil men and women burst Into tears, and billows of emotional excite ment rolled back and forth through the church. Winfield Scott Moody in Scribner's. YULETIDE IN SHETLAND. Cur!OHM Customs lii th« Islam! Where lite I'ouitvH Come From. The festival of Yule, as is well known, dates back to prehistoric times, when men worshiped nature rather than nature's God. The inhabitants of the Shetland Isles are descended from Norsemen, who were zealots in religious belief, and "Yule" to them meant a season of great importance. The "Gainmel Norsk Iljul" signifies, literally, "wheel," and the festival so called was held in honor of the sun at the winter solstice wheel ing round toward the equator. The re turn of fhe sun formed an important period of the year as being the begin ning of renewed life in nature, which only could be revived by the light and warmth of the ascending orb. The course of the sun was observed in all things as far as possible. Every thing was turned from left to right the bout was so turned on the water, the corn slacks so built in courses, the mill so turned in grinding and the wheel in spinning in fact, everything went with Hie sun, even the round of flie drinking horn. Many superstitions included in na ture worship had full scope at tile "Iljul" lime or more modern "Yule" —when a vast multitude of "trows," or fairy folk, who at that season were not only active, but maliciously dis posed, had to be propitiated. To give the fairy folk no opportunity of pitying tricks, the fishing creel mid lines were removed from the wall, the spinning wheel taken out of gear and its integral parts laid aside, and every thing suspended from coiling or wails lifted down, as if left in their usual places the übiquitous elves were sup posed to set all going against the sun's motion, which of course would mean serious trouble. The time of Yule was. and still is, rigidly observed as "belly" —I. e., a time of rest from all manner of labor.—Madame. t li rlst mas In (■ nit us. Christmas was celebrated in Guam last year in as true American style a; the possibilities of the situation would permit. Great interest was taken by the in celebrations for the native children. A number of enter tainments were provided. A feature was a floating Christmas tree, mag nificently decorated, which was parad ed through the streets of Agana drawn t> y six plumed mules witli costumed outriders and preceded by a native band and from which Santa Claus dis tributed abundance of good cheer. A New .Malady. It was Christmas day, and the candy lion had been waiting—oh, so patiently —for Mary to finish her dinner. Much against her baby wishes had she been obliged to swallow the last of her bread. When her mother insisted on her finishing her milk the small face looked up in desperation as she lisped. "Mozzer, if I eat any more food I will be humpback in my stomach, like grandpa!"— L ippincott's. Only Two TU-nliticH. Billy—So yer didn't gel nuthin' but a jackknife and a sled for Christmas? Tommy—Yes, dot's all 1 got worth speakln' of. I)ere wuz a suit of clothes, and a overcoat, anil a hat or two, and some underclothes, and a b >ok o' poems, and some stoekiu's and gii/ves, and some collars and cuffs, mid a few other tilings like Mat, not worth speakln' of.—Men and Women. Don't I