FIIIS CAMERON COUNTY PRESS. ESTABLISHED BY C. B. GOULD, IWJTLN, 1866 VOL. 41. Business Cards. J. O. JOHNSON. J P. MONABN"> i JOHNSON & M N'A IINHY, A T TORNE YB-AT-DA W | KMPOHIBM, PA. Will give prompt atteution to all busiiit- j eji- j trusted to tliein. 16-ly. MICHAEL BIiENN AN, ATTORNEY-AT-LA.W j Collections promptly attended to. Ileal estate j auri pension claim agent, 35-ly. Emporium, Pa. j JAY P. FELT. AT TOR >" EY-AT-LAW, | Corner Fourth and Broad streets, j Emporium, Pa. All business relating to estate.pollections, reai estate. Orphan's Courtandtten< ral lav business will receive prompt attention. 41-25-ly. AMERICAN HOUSE, East Emporium, Pa., JOHN L. JOHNSON, Prop'r. Having resumed,proprietorship of this old and I well established House I invite? iiu- patronage of j the public. House newly 'irr: hed and thor- j oughiy reuovated. 48ly THE NOVELTY RESTAURANT, (Opposite Post Office,) Emporium, Pa. WILLIAM MCDOXALIJ, Proprietor. I take pleasure in informing the public that i i have purchased the old ana j pular Novelty Restaurant, located on Fourth Mrcet. It will be my endeavor to serve the public in a manner that shall meet with ir approbation. Give me a call. Meal, and luncheon served at all hours. n027-lyr Wm. McDONALD. ' MAY GOULD, TEACHBH OF PIANO, HARMONY AND THEORY, Also dealer in all the Popular .Sheet Mu.* ic, Emporium, Pa. Scholar*: taughCtanher at. my home on 'ixth 3treet or at t lie homes of the pupite. Out oftown scholars will be given dates at my roon-, in this place. | DU. LEON REX FELT, DENTIST. Rockwell Block, Emporium, Pa DR. H. W. MITCHF.I.L, DENTIST, (S accessor to Dr. A. B. Mead.) Office o* W A. F. Volt's Shoo Store, Emporium, Pa. 121y Great Grangers' Picnic at Wil liams' Grove. The 34th Annual Great Grangers' Pic nic Exhibition will be hold on the "Old Camp Grounds," Williams' Grove, August 26-31, 1907. The exhibition of farm machinery, implements, etc., and live stock promises to exceed that of any former year. A splendid program will be presented in the AiiidKorium: Wednesday, Governor Stuart and Hon. John O. Sheatz, Republican Can didate for State Treasurer; Thursday, Hon. N. J. Bachelder, former Governor of New Hampshire, and Master of the National Grange, Hon. W. F. Hill, Master Pennsylvania State Grange and other prominent Grangers. T&esday and Wednesday evenings, Mr. Frank R. Roberson, in illustrated lectures ou South America and the Panama Canal. Thursday and Friday evenings, Ideal Vaudeville Company. Everything high grade and up-to date. Excursions on all railroads. Consult your Station Agent. Base Ball. A very interesting game of base ball was played OL the park grounds last Saturday between the home team and the St. Marys boys. It took ten in nings to decide the contest. The Em porium boys won out in the tenth, by the score of 6to 6. Young pitched for St. Marys and held our boys sately throughout the game with the excep tion of the fourth inning when they landed on him for live runs. Gilbert was on the firing line for the home team, and with a lead of fonr runs could not hold the Elk county boys, who were steadily gaining runs, and manager Walker sent him to the bench and called out Hemphill, who was a puzzle for the boys after the first inning, when they counted one run, tieing the score. From this time on it was an interesting battle with honors even until the last half of the tenth, which settled the contest with the above result. The Port Allegany base ball team came over on Monday and defeated the Railroad boys to the tune of 10-2. The Emporium team lost to Ridgway yesterday, score 10 to 5. Big Cut of Timber. H. S. Best, General Supt. manufac turing and shipping deparcment, of Central Penn'a Lumber Co., William sport, Pa., transacted business in Em porium on Friday and made the PHESS sanctum a visit, accompanied by E. L. Mason, one of the best mill men in the state. Mr. Best was looking for men for their big mill at Sheffield, Pa., about to commence on a twenty year cut. Ice Cream Social. There will be an ico cream social at the West Creek school house, Saturday evening, Aug. 24th, for the benefit of the church. The public is cordially in vited to attend. The champion ice cream eater of the Valley, Willis Gas kill, will meet the Emporium champ ion on this occasion. Mu- ij.' and Fun in"The Toy makers." Tliejf. are very few theatregoers in the ITtiUed Siat< 3 and Caiiada who have nut seen and enjoyed that ostiNow England pi My ever written," "Quirq.n Ad amu JJawys.While music jvas not made a great feature of thin ptyiy or the production, whnt there wan'op-.'it was ;>i" the most enjoyable sort, and of great assistance in thceom ple&nfe«t> and success of the entertain ment. The author of "Qufcicy Adams Sawyer" is Charles Felton Pidgin, who now conies with a new play, "The Toy - makers," whose locale i i laid in old England in a picturesque little village of Middleton-On-The-Quick, with char acters as quaint and as interesting as the village itself. They are indeed the village for, alter all, it is the individual that gitofa color and life aijd warmth to otherwise inanimate and uninterest ing wood and brick and clay and glass. Author Pidgin, in"The Toymakers", has drawn his characters with a dia mond paint, has laid on his colors in masses;'his brushwork is strong and vigorofcisiand his composition is certain to enchain the attention. He has done more tlian this for IK has made his chfiracterfl ting appropriate songs. Now,- although Mr. Pidgin has written the songs, commonly called lyrics, he makes no pretence to ability to write music, so the aid of those two weil known Boston composers, Charles 1). Blake arid John A Bennett, was called into service and the result was a de lightful bombination of lyric and music rarely found nowadays, even in the most ambitions of musical comedies. "The Toymakers" is to be presented here at the Emporium Opera House, Monday evening, Oct. 21, 1907, by "The Jollities," under the management of Charles F. Atkinson and James That cher and nearly three hours of deli cious fun, clean wit, snappy satire, comical situations, electrical life and a foast of joyous melody are assured to all patrons. There are nearly two dozen musical numbers in"The Toy makers" and those not of the neces sary descriptive or romantic character will be certain to keop the lingers and the toes a tapping and send one home in right merry mood. "The Seminary Girl.". There are many delightful features about "The Seminary Girl," Melville B. B. Raymond's comedy with music which comes to the Emporium Opera House, on Wednesday, Sept, 4th, not the least of which is the thor oughly American atmosphere of the book. The story is consistent and wittily unfolded. Steve Dwyer, a New York politician, realizing that his daughter, Dorothy, will soon leave the seminary, determines to have plenty of blue blood in the family. Armed with a check book he goes to Germany in search of a title, meets Baron Ru dolph von Gruber; looks up his family record and buys up the scion of nobil ity outright and returns to United States. Dorothy and some of her friends are spending the summer at Saratoga. Young Grannan, a typical American of the never-say die class, very much in love with Dwyer'schild, meets her father and takes him for an escaped lunatic, Daffy Dan. Steve thinks the young man is crazy and tries to humor him. In the midst of a very funny scene in comes an aged school marm spinster who would say "yes" to the question that would add the prefix of Mrs. to her name. She imagines that Dwyer is the King of some South Sea Islands and relentless jly pursues him. The Baron's Ameri can wife arrives in search of her van ishing husband and mistakes the waiter, Schultz, a follower of Gran nan's, for the Baron. Daffy Dan, the lunatic, comes into view and points out old Dwyer as the insane individual. The trouble waxes fast and furious for everybody. The second act shows the deck of a yacht. How Grannon pre vents the marriage of Dorothy and the Baron is highly interesting and the sequence is naturally worked out. The piece contains many musical numbers that are hits and the chorus is a bril liant one. Knute Erickson is the fea ture and Miss Minnie Jarbeau plays the title role supported by a capable com [ pany. Ladies' Society Outing. Several lady members of Emmanuel j Episcopal Church Sewing Society en i joyed an outing on Tuesday, at River side Park, near Portville. They en | joyed the day's sport very much. For Sale or Rent. Sterling House, opposite depot, Sterl ing Run, Pa. Inquire at my residence, opposite Catholic church, Emporium, j Pa. 11-tf. MRS. MAHONY. "Liberty and Union, One and Inseparable."— WEßSTEß. EMPORIUM, PA., THURSDAY, AUGUST 22, 1907. WHAT IS EMPORIUM BOAKD OF HEALTH, DOING? Rldgway Suffering From Typhoid i Fever. i Ridgway, is, according to a dispatch I sent out from that town, suffering from two epidemics and it is said, so many j people have been afflicted that every 1 train is carrying many out of town. Everyone who can raise a few dollars for car.'uro is fleeing from the town with all personal effects. On Monday , many i cople were taken ill with ty- ; phoid fever and cases have developed! on an average of 15 to 18 or 20 a day | since then. The situation is growing | worse every hour. Already there have i been more than 75 cases developed ! Hiiu e Monday and there an: numerous ! deaths. The local health- department, ; of which Dr. James Stcnfield is chair- j man, is not able to cope with the epi- i demic and physicians from outside have beeu called upon to give assist-) ance. Continuing the dispatch says: j "about the same time typhoid fever ! became epidemic another one of a dif- I fa rent nature made its appearance. I Children ranging in ages from 5 to 13 j years have been taken ill and generally | within -18 bourn' time their lower limbs became paralyzed. In the past week! over forty canes have developed and i the unknown disease is spreading rap- I idly. Already there are . about forty j v.'ho have been thus afflicted. Local : physicians and health oflicers who have j been called to attend these cases refuse | to make any statement and it is said they are unable to determine just what the disease is. Some say they have never seen the like of it' before. Al ready there have been several deaths and more are expected. It is expected that the state health department will send representatives here at once." What has already happened to Ridg way may strike Emporium at any hour, since we are drinking water pumped from West Creek, during the summer months. We do not wish to alarm our citizens and pose as an alarmist, yet our duty as a journalist is plain. If the creek water in whole some, well and good. If it. is not then, our board of health are the proper per sons to solve the question. It is too grave and dangerous a question to risk the lives of our citizens until death and a scourge sweeps our town. Each year we are promised plenty of water and aa regular as the year comes around pump! pump! comes, what surely must be, unhealthful water. The Water Company, no doubt, do the best they can with the system as now con structed, but it does not All the wants of the people for domestic use and fire purposes. We .ire informed that Salt Run is adequate to supply the town. It is up to the Water Company to remedy the defective system. In a word, our advise to all citizens is to drink either Sizerville water; filter or boil the creek water. Do not use water from wells, where they can get the washings from the hillsides or seepings from cesspools on the flat. Boil every drop of water you use for cooking and drinking until such a time as the mains are flushed with clean pure water. The State Health Commissioner is due in this section of the state this week, to view the source of water sup. ply furnished the towns in this section. Leaves Emporium. Mr. Alired Hockley, who has resided in Emporium for fifteen or sixteen years, left last Saturday for Muncy, Pa., his old home, where he will reside until he decides on a permanent home. "Al" was a good citizen, quiet and un assuming and a man of good judgment. We regret he has «een fit to leave us for we always liked him and enjoyed his friendship. He is a man true to his honest convictions at all times. Suc cess to him, wherever he may locate. Furniture at Private Sale. The undersigned offers for sale her household goods, at private sale, on ac count of leaving Emporium. The goods are all in first-class condition consisting of: One bed room suit, side board, book case, dining table, couch, centre table, two parlor chairs, four leather covered dining chairs, upholst ered leather rocker, three art squares, two heating and one cooking stove, kitchen utensils, crockery, cabinet, table and three chairs. Call at my rooms on Maple street, between the hours of eight to ten a. m., and five to seven p. m. All goods must be sold by Sept. Ist. 27-2t. MRS. APOLLJNA TROTTER. Settled in Full. James R. Batclielder, Constable and Collector of Grove township, was a PRESS visitor on Tuesday, while settl ing his tax duplicate with the County Commissioners. Mr. Batchelder is a faithful official and prides himself up on his record. "Jim" Batchelder is all right. Call at Chas. Diehl's old stand and , see what bargaids we offer in ladies and gents shoes. THOS. W. WELSH. NOTES OF INTEREST. The night watchman at the jail, Ai | bc-rt Murray, is not troubled with loaf ers. I Contractors and builders would do well to read the Sbippen School Board , advertisement in another column, In viting bids for the new school house. "You will be pressed for money of tener because you have no advertising : bills to pay than because you have," j observes The Buffalo News." Big ad j vertising bills and big bank balances j grow, together, out of the same publi ■ city campaigns." The merchant who | ; hold:: down his expense account by \ j cutting out advertising saves money j j just the way the railroads would if ! j they should stop buying coal for their | j locomotives. Without coal the wheels , ( won't turn; without publicity trade ! comes to a standstill. It pays to throw j | silver out of the window that gold j may come in at the door.—Philadel- ; phia Record. While it is fashionable now-a-days | to given linen showers, kitchen show | ers, variety showers, and several other j kinds of showers, it is strange that no | one has thought of inaugurating a sub | scription shower, and several other kinds of showers that would interest the printer who earns his money, but in very many instances is kept in the background during these shower aea- Bon, llow happy would be the printer to record the fact that he had been given a subscription, or advertising shower now and then. Such ovedts would cheer him on his way to encour age the other kind of showers in their fullest capaacity. Who will be the first to inaugurate a genuine old fashioned newspaper shower, whereby all delin quents will step up in the captain's of fice and liquidate all indebtedness? The Democrat will offer as a prize to the man who will set the ball a rolling a year's subscription as a recompense for his efforts to increase on the public the fact that the printer occasionally needs a shower of dollars to keep ,-bings going.— Smethport Democrat. Secretary Tafl's Columbus speech constitutes a remarkable contribution to the literature of the Republican party. It deals with the railroads, the trusts and the tariff, and incidentally with the subject of "Swollen fortunes." With that perfect candor which is his chief cuaraoteristic, Mr. Taft makes a complete profession of faith and criticises with severity, but not with extravagance, the evils of railway management and the culpability of the men whose cupidity and greed for gain have forced the federal gov em ment to increase its control over the "highways of the nation." He ex plains with extraordinary lucidity the purpose and effect of the railway rate bill, points out the defects in the Elkins bill and exposes the fallacy of tha ar gument that 'the Elkins measure was sufficient to correct all evils without further legislation. He sternly con demns those trust officials who have used their extraordinary power to crush out legitimate competition and to practise extortion on the people. He regards progressive inheritance taxa tion, to be imposed by the states as the best remedy for "swollen fortunes" and the federal income tax he would resort to only in the event of necessity for extraordinary revenues. Secretary Taft's keynote speech is eloquent only in so far as the expres sion of convictions which can have been arrived at only after profound thought in the simplest terms and with convincing earnestness is eloquent. There are no bursts of oratory, no flights of rhetoric in his declaration of his convictions with, perhaps, one ex ception, the peroration in which he de clares his admiration for Theodore Roosevelt and all that he has done for the Republican party. Strike Soon to End. NEW YORK, Aug. 20—The belief pre vails here that the telegraph compan ies will arbitrate despite their declara tion that they have nothing to arbi trate. Chas. P. Neill, United States labor commissioner, is expected here to ! morrow to meet Gompers, John Mitch i elll and D. J. Keefe, officials of the I American Federation of Labor, with a i view of a settlement between the men | and the companies. Lost Bet and Life. Terry Ryan, a glass blower, of Smethport, waged that he could climb I to the top of the courthouse and reach ; the figure justice on the top of the | tower, when he fell to the ground, a i distance of 130 feet, killing him instant ly. He leaves a wife and several small children. ROOSEVELT STANDS PAT ON HIS POLICIES Challenges Money Kings of Wall Street, WHO SHALL RULE NATION, PEOPLE OR PLUTOCRATS? President Roosevelt made a forceful and timely speech Tuesday at the lay ing of the corner stone fqr a handsome monument at Provincetown, Mass., to mark the first landing place of the Pilgrim fathers. •In this speech the- President replied to attacks that have been made upon him and his policies and expressed a determination to continue theso policies no matter what opposition might come. Provincetown was crowded with peo ple who gathered to witness the plac ing of the granite block that is to form part of foundation of the memorial of the early settlers. In addition to the speech made by the President, addressee were also de livered by James Bryoe, British Am bassador to the United States, Gov ernor Gouild of Massachusetts, and several high Mi.->>r»iir officials. The eeremonies began with "the ar rival of President Roosevelt on the Mayflower. Warships saluted the President's yacht, which fired an an swering salute. The President was met at the dock ai d escorted to the monument grounds, the crowds cheer ing him at every foot. After a prayer the corner stone was laid by the Grand Master of Masons in Massachusetts. Then came the speeches by the President and others, after which the assembly attended a banquet in the town hall. DEATH'S* DOINGS E23HI JOHNSON. After two years of suffering with an incurtiblo stomach disease. Mr*\ W. W. Jonhson, wife of Section Foreman W. W. Johnson, of Huntley, died at the home of her daughter Mattie in Renovo, Monday evening, August 19th. Mrs. Johnson had recovered sufficient ly to be able togo to Renovo a week ago to visit her daughter and appar ently felt as good as could be expected up to a few days ago, when she was taken with spells of heart failure and died in one of these attacks. The re mains were brought to Huntley on the evening train Tuesday evening. The funeral was held from the Huntley Church Wednesday at 1:30 p. m., the Rev. Mr. Ebersole, of Sterling Run, officiating. The remains were interred in the Huptley Cemetery, Johnson was forty-six years of age and is survived by her husband, three sons and five daughters. The deep sympathy of the entire community is with the bereaved family in their great sorrow. j. F. S. $1.25 WHEAT COMING. Only a Two-Thirds Crop in the West Will Make Prices Soar. There will be little more than a two thirds crop of wheat in the United States and that wheat will reach $1.25 a bushel this fall, is the prediction of George C. Howe, of Dulutb, Minn., one of the largest wheat growers of the great Northwest. Mr. How is in the East on business and outlined the wheat con ditions at a Washington hotel. He said: "In Minnesota the crop is probably two-thirds what it usually is, and the some conditions prevail in North and South Dakota. Tfie backward spring held crops up aud after they got start ed they were injured in so many places by excessive rains. Yet in other sec tions there was a shortage of rain, and this condition has done the most dam age during the season of maturing of crops. Kansas will this year make not more than 60,000,000 bushels, which is about three-fourths of the usual output. These are vital states whsn it comes to the production of wheat, and I feel as sured from present conditions, that the price will be not less than $1.25 in the outumn. The foreign demand is strong and has a tendency to advance prices. The output of Argentina is not yet known, and the crop in South Am erica will exert a strong iufluence on the market and be of much importance in connection with the year's output. It cannot under the most favorable conditions, however, be sufficient to prevent wheat reaching a price ib has not reached for a number of years." Wanted. A good girl for general housework. Apply to MRS. JOHN GLEASON, Drift wood, Pa. 26-tf„ TERMS: $2.00 —$1.-50 IN ADVANCE. 'I HE WEATHER. FRIDAY, I air. SATURDAY, Fair. SUNDAY, Sliowerg, 112 ASSETS First National Bank, EMPORIUM, PA. At Ihi; close of business Aug. 21* t 1907. $845,710.62 SHORT ROAD. For most of us there is no shorter roail to wealth than by working hard and spending less than we cam. The greatest aid to systematic saving is a bank account in a reliablo insty ' n like the FIRST NATIONAL, BANK, EiApi. Pa. INTEREST PAID ON' CERTIFICATES OF DEPOSIT. Notice to Contractors. We wish to correspond with log job bers in Pennsylvania, that can stock to railroad, from one million to three mil lion feet in a job. When job is com pleted, will give new job HO jobber will have work from year to 'year. We have the stocking of the timber on 57,- 000 acres an; pay the beat prices. Our work is worth investigating. G. W. HUNTLEY & Sox, 23-tf. Shryock, W. Va. Piano for Sale. A good second-hand piano for sale very clieyp, §3O. J. P. MCNABNEY. Increase Your Earning Power. There are thousands of young farm ers in Pennsylvania who are trying to lind the best way uf handling live stock and laud. They are wanting to 'win. The widest of these men are watching the methods of successful farmers in their neighborhoods. That is a good thing to do. In addition to these ob servations and their own experience they want to know the principle that control in the development of animals and of plants. When they have the principles there is less guess work and there are fewer mistakes and failures. We have in this country tens of thous ands of very successful farmers who say that they owe part of their success to the teaching of practical scientists who discovered facts that had a big cash value when carried into the field and orchard and stable. The best way to get facts is by listen ing # to the man who has the facts. When one can be with a man, quest ioning him and talking with him the true value of his facts is learned. Our agricultural colleges have devot ed much time to giving young men a full college course. That is all right but the agricultural college receives all the money that the state appro priates for agricultural education and it owes a duty to the ninety farmers out of every hundred who do not want to devote four years to college studies. It must help all who want help. A few years ago some of our western agricultural colleges solved this problem. They established winter courses of study for busy young men. The scheme was to invite these men to spend twelve weeks at the agricul tural collego listening to lectures on practical tarm subjects. No entrance examinations should be required and the twelve weeks should be devoted to a study of things tliat puzzle a man in the handling of laud, plants, live stock and dairy products. The young men came to these colleges in great number and these winter courses have become immensely popular. Last winter the Legislature gave funds to the School of Agriculture of The Pennsylvania State College to render this practical service to the young men of Pennsylvania. The re organization of the School by the Dean, Dr. Thomas F. Hunt, formerly of Cor nell, brought in some of the most practical, helpful scientists of other states, and they became a part of the force of instruction in the five winter courses in agriculture. These courses begin December 3rd and continue to February 26th. Any man in the state may enter any one of these courses and he does so without any examina tion. If he is wanting facts that will help him to understand his life work he is welcome. The five courses deal with plain agriculture, horticulture, dairy husbandry, poultry and cream ery. Every reader who is interested should address "Alva Agee, State Col lege, Pa.," tor further information. Send a postal asking for details. Ridgway's Epidemic. With seventy-five cases of typhoid fever in Ridgway the citizens of that burg have every reason to be alarmed. A town the size of Ridgway, with its great wealth, certainly can have an abundance of pure water. No doubt the state health department will tear up some of the typhoid breeding pests in this section of the state. Ridgway has for years complained of their foul water supply. Big bargains in ladies and gents shoes. THOS. W. WELSH. NO. 27