THE CAMERON COUNTY PRESS. ESTABLISHED BY C. B. GOULD, MARCH, 1866. VOL. 41. ItusinesH Cards. J.C.JOHNSON. J. P. MCNARNEV JOHNSON & McNAKNEY, ATTORNEYS- AT-LAW EMPORIUM, PA. Will give prorupt attention to all business eu -1 rusted to them. 18-ly. MICHAELBRENNAN, ATTORNEY AT-LAW Collections promptly attended to. Real estate and pension claim agent, 35-ly. Emporium. Pa. | HTW. GRRBN. J* Y P- E ELT - j GREEN & FEET, ATTORNEYS-AT-LAW, Corner Fourth and Broad streets, Emporium, Pa. All business relating to estate.collections. real estate. Orphan's Court and general law busmen s will receive prompt attention. 41-25-ly. AMERICAN HOUSE, East Emporium, Pa.. JOHN 1,. JOHNSON, Prop'r. Having resumed proprietorship of this old and well established House I invite the patronage of the public. House newly furnished and thor oughly renovated. *B'y MAY GOULD, TBACHER OP PIANO, HARMONY AND THEORY, Also dealer in all the Popular Sheet Music, Emporium, Pa. Scholars taught either at my home on Sixth street or at the homes of the pupils. Out oftown scholars will be given dates at my roomfinthia place. DR. LEON REX FELT, DENTIST. Rockwell Block, Emporium, Pa DR. H. W. MITCHELL, DENTIST, (Successor to Dr. A. B. Mead.) Office over A. F. Vo£t'B Shoe Store, Emporium, PH. 121y Correct Game Laws. To perhaps none but the leading sportsman of the state, are the game laws for this fall clear, in view of the changes made by the last legislature. A number of incorrect reports relative to the true laws have been circulating, and as the open season is only about two weeks away, it is time for the huntsman of the state to know exactly what they can and cannot do. The open season for a number of game birds and creatures have been extended, while the law relative to killing of deer have been made more stringent than ever before. It will this season take an expert to kill his deer in compli ance with the law, so a little practice before hand would not come amiss. The open season for killing game is as follows: Plover, number uulimited, July 15 to December 1. Doves and shore birds, number un limited, September 1 to January 1. Wild water-fowls, umber unlimited September 1 to April 10, without inter mission. Snipe, number unlimited, September 1 to May 1. Pheasants, five iu one day, twenty in one week, fifty in one season, October 1 to December 1. Squirrels, six in one day, October 1 to December 1. Bears, unlimited, October 1 to March 1. Wild turkeys, one in a day, four in a season, October 15 to December 1. Rabbits, unlimited, October 15 to December 1. The penalty for taking a rabbit out of a hole has been removed and it is now lawful to take them in any manner during the season. Quail or partridge, ten in one day, forty in one week, seventy-five in one season, November 1 to December 1. The quail season is unchanged, but ad ditional provision for the protection of birds are made. It is unlawful to shoot or injure quails when bunched upon the ground; or to kill any game birds at night; or to kill any game at all by the use of any gun other than the kind usually raised at arm's length and fired from the shoulder. The change in the deer law is impor tant. The open season is from Novem ber 15 to December 1, but hereafter only male deer with horns may be kill ed. Does and fawns are absolutely protected. This became necessary by reason of the fact that the number ol hunters is so great that deer in season are practically driven from cover tc cover as if they were pursued by dogs. The penalty for violation of the law ie #IOO or a day in jail for each dollar, It will be safest to leave the head or the carcass to prove the deer killed hac horns Teachers' Institute. The Annual Teachers' Institute wil convene in Emporium, Oct. 21-25 This promises to be the most success ful institute in the history of th< county. The best talent has beei secured for both day and evening in struction and entertainment. Latest Popular Music. Miss May Gould, teacher of pian< forte has received a full line of the lat est and most popular sheet music. A 1 the popular airs. Popular and class ical music. Prices reasonable. 44-tf. Accidental Mistakes. A good one is going the rounds: A certain business man in a town not lOOl) miles away was sitting in the office ilone, enjoying a smoke, when he had iccasion to use the telephone. He irose, laid the cigar on the chair and ;ook down the receiver when a friend jtepped in the offie and started to sit lown on a chair. Not realizing that ;lie operator could hear what he was laying and just as she was going to jay what "number please" in her iweetest tones, the man yelled, "Look jut there, you'll burn your pants!" Communication between him and cen tral was cut off immediately. Must Stand Criticism. The court at Somerset with Judge Martin 801 l of Blair county, on the lench, a decision was rendered in the libel lease against a newspaper that jeems destined to act as a precedent in like cases that may be instituted here after in other courts of the state. Editor A. Kendall of the Meyersdale Republican was sued by Clinton A. Wagner, one time opposition party candidate for protlionotary, who al leged the editor had published defama tory matter about him during the cam paign. Judge Bell took the case from the jury and decided the case in favor of Kendall. The court held that when a citizen becomes a candidate for office, n, paper opposed to him may voice its sentiments with impunity. According to the court's decision any candidate will hereafter be com pelled to stand the fire of merciless criticism. Died Down East. Last Friday word was received here of the death of Michael Hacket, pro prietor of the Medix Run Hotel, who accompanied by his two children and a niece were on a visit to Mr. Hacket's old home at Chatham, N. B. His death was caused by heart failure. Mr. Hacket received a fall sometime ago in which he hurt himself badly and has been troubled from the effects ever since, but his death was a great shock to his friends. His remains were brought to his old home at Driftwood on Monday for in terment. The funeral was held on Wednesday. His age was 49 year". Deceased was a widower and is sur vived by two children, a girl and a boy aged seven and nine years respective ly. Also by two brothers, John and James Hacket, both of whom reside at Driftwood. Preferred by Business Men. Young men and women trained in the Rochester Business Institute are sought for positions in the best busi ness houses. Thoroughly parpared as sistants are what business men con stantly need, and they have learned from experience that R. B. 1., gradu ates have the requisite preparation. 1407 calls for graduates to fill excellent places within a single year speaks volumes for the reputation of the school. How to KnowTlme for Contagion. The following time table should be preserved by every mother, as it is often the source of the greatest anx iety to know whether or not a child will develop a desease after having been exposed to it. Symptoms usual ly appear as follows: Chickenpox Fourteenth day Diphtheria Second day Measles Fourteenth day Mumps Nineteenth day Scarlet fever Fourth day Smallpox Twelfth day Typhoid fever Twenty-first day Whooping cough. Fourteenth day Beware of Ointments for Catarrh that Contain Hercury. As mercury will surely destroy the sense of smell and completely derange the whole system when entering it through the mucous surfaces. Such articles should never bo used except on prescription from reputable physicians, as the damage they will do is ten fold to the good you can possibly derive from them. Hall's Catarrh Cure, manufactured by F. J. Cheney & Co., Toledo, ()., contains no mercury, and is taken internally, acting directly up on the blood and mucous surfaces of the system. In buying Hall's catarrh Cure be sure you get the genuine. It is taken internally and made in Toledo, Ohio, by F. J. Cheney & Go. Testi monials free. Sold by Druggists. Price, 75c per bottle. Take Hall's Family Pills for Constipation. The Touch that heals. Isthe touch ofßucklen's Arnica Salve. It's the happiest combination of Arnica flowers and healing balsams ever com pounded. No matter how old the sore or ulcer is, this Salve will cure it. For burns, scalds, cuts, wounds or piles, it's an absolute cure. Guaranteed by all druggists. 25c. "Liberty and Union, One and Inseparable."— WEßSTEß. EMPORIUM, PA., THURSDAY, SEPTEMBER 19, 1907. A Woman's View. Far be it from a mere man, like our self, to pen an indictment against the opposite sex. In the first place,we are boo chrivalous and gallant to do such a thing. In the second place, it would aot he safe for us to do it. This con sideration is incidental, but by no means to he disregarded. In the third place, is is not necesaary; for women mil alw.ays be depended upon to say of ane another and of their sex generally ill that needs to be said. Mrs. Anna A. Rogers in the Septem ber Atlantic discusses the question, "Why American Marriages Fail," and boldly charges her own sex with a large ihare of responsibility for the growing prevalence of the divorce evil. Mrs. Rogers, it may be said in passing, re fuses to take the view that divorce is not an evil, but only an attempt to remedy an evil. Divorce iB an evil, just astoo ready a resort to the surgeon'e knife and saw is an evil. "Gentler remedies," says Mrs. Rogers, "dietary measures, the daily regime of more in telligent living, have been known to spare more than one patient the hor rors of the operating table. In fact is not prevention the only genuine mod ern miracle?" In the bill of charges, which Mrs. Rogers brings against her own sex she specifies: " (1) Woman's failure to realize that marriage is her work in the world. (2) Her growing individual ism. (3) Her lost art of giving, re placed by a highly developed receptive faculty." •'First: Marriage it woman's work in the world—not man's. From what ever point it is viewed, physical or spiritual, as a question of civic polity or a question of individual ethics, it is her specific share in the world's work —first, last, and always; allotted to her by laws far stronger than she is. And the woman who fails to recognize it has the germ of divorce in her veins at the outset. * * * Why should she not be taught the plain fact that no other work really important to the world has ever been done by a woman since "the morning of the world?" Only as a woman, with all that that en tails upon her, is she alone, pre-emin ent, unapproachable. And yet appar ently her whole energy is to-day bent upon dethroning herself." Mrs. Rogers sees in the growing in dividualism of the American woman only another name for the worship of Self. "She has not merged her fate with her husband's if married, nor with her father's, if not; she does not properly supplement their lives, she is striving for a detached profitless in dividuality." We shall quote but one yiore para graph',from this thoughtful and timely article. Upon her third point Mrs. Rogers says:"ln India an affection which asks for an equal,return so many heart-beats for a like number, is called 'shop-keeping." Among us Wertern ers this Eastern exalted faculty of giv ing affection, and not looking for an equal exchange of commodities, has dogeneratedi into a sott of passion foi sentimental bargains! Unfortunately, there are no genuine psychic bargains thrown out on life's counter. The really good spiritual things cost the most do,as the material things. Succeße in any undertaking, even marriage, if always both shy and obstinate, and hides behind quite a thorny hedge o! persistence, hard work, unsefishness, and above all, patience, a quality now gone out of fashion, which made our grandmothers civilizing centers o! peace and harmony; for they were con tent to use slow curative measures to mend their matrimonial ailments, and the "knife" was looked upon witt horror. One findß so often in the women of that generation a strange quiet as of wisdom long digested; a deep abiding strength, an aloofness ol personality that makes for dignity; sweet old faces that bear the marks ol "love's grandeur." What is there to day in all this fret and fuss aud fury ol feminine living, that compares with the power for good of those wonderful old women, fast disappearing?" To check a cold quickly, get from your druggist some little (Jandy Cold Tablets called Preventics. Druggists everywhere are now dispensing Pre ventics, for they are not only safe, but decidedly certain and prompt. Pre ventics contain no quinine, no laxative nothing harsh nor sickening. Taken at the "sneeze stage". Preventics will prevent Pneumonia, Bronchitis, La Orippe, etc. Hence the name, Pre ventics. Good for feverish children. 48 Preventics 25 cents. Trial boxes sc. Sold by all dealers. GRANGERS AT CENTRE HALL. For tli* Patrons of Husbandry Exhibition ul Centre Hull, I'*., Sept. 14-20, the Pennsylvania Kallroad Company will sell special excursion tickets to Centre Hull to all stations in Pennsyl vania and from lialtimoru and Klinira at reduced rali-s. (Minimum rate 25 cents.; Tickets will bt sold September 13 to 2<>, «ood to return unti September 28 inclusive. 1047-3t. Card of Thanks. Mr. and Mrs. Ira Good wish to ex tend their thanks to the neighbors and Friends who so kindly aided them in the sickness and death of their baby. A Correction. In our last issue in our account of the leath of Mr. Rosetti's child we were misinformed as to his nationality, it should have read "French" instead of Italian. Killed at Olcan. Mrs. Carrie Meyers, of Springfield, Mass., a professioal balloonist fell from i parachute over a thousand feet above the fair grounds at Oiean last Monday. Every bone in her body was broken. A Good Sign. We are informed that the proprietor of one of our hotels has posted a sign in his house announcing that he will not permit gambling. There can be only one thing associated with cards (or any other game) that is worse than gambling, and that is cheating. Bought a Farm. L. S. Fisk has purchased a farm on West Creek, where he will putin all his spare time while not engaged at his planing mill, and expects to be able next year to have an exhibit at the fair that will make the eyes of our old farm ers water. We do not know what he intends to raise but we presume it is Indian turnips. County Sunday School Conven tion. The sixth annual convention of the County Sunday School Association held in the Baptist Church on Monday and Tuesday, was the best attended and moßt enthusiastic gathering of the kind yet held in Cameron county. The Rev. C. F. Irwin, of Bellevue, and Miss Ermina, Lincoln, of Philadelphia rep resented the State Association. A full report of the proceedings will appear in our columns next week. Not a Debatable Issue. The Democratic candidate for State Treasurer indicates that it is his pur pose to make the issue in the campaign the retention of a representative of the minority party on the Board of Public Grounds and Buildings, says Philadel phia Press. If there is any iksue concerning that board it is the clearing its membership of the auditing and accounting officers of the State, and that would take away the State Treasurer, as it should. The Capitol Investigating Commission recommend that in its report to the Governor, and there is very little doubt that Governor Stuart will recommend it in his message to the next Legisla ture. The proposition was met with practi cally unanimous favor. Every Demo cratic newspaper, as well as every Re publican newspaper which has com mented on it, has given it approval. It is obviously wrong that officials whe are to pass upon contract work shall be in a position to make the contracts, audit the accounts and pay them. II affords no check of any kind where tb« officials may be careless or dishonest That this will be radically changed bj the next Legislature can be set dowr as very certain. Meantime it is not a question of put ting a Democrat on the board. Whai is wanted is that the board, as long ai it must exist, shall be constituted o vigilant, eareful men who have populai confidence. Does not Governor Stuari meet that requirement? Does not Auditor General Young meet itl Would not John O. Sheatz as StaU Treasurer meet it completely? Noi even the most virulent of the opposi tion organs has assumed to questioi the personal integrity of Mr. Sheatz and those who are honest with them selves have frankly conceeded both hit independence and unimpeachable char acter. Yielding all the Democrats claim foi their candidate he could do no more t( protect the interest of the Suite, 1 elected, than the Republican nomineef will do, and Mr. Sheatz's public recorc ! is justly accepted as assurance of that i Our Democratic friends evidently mis j understand the present conditions i Every demand for a watchful, faithful, i honest management of the State fin i ances will be met by the election of Mr j Sheatz. | The Democratic candidate's pretend ' ed issue has nothing to stand upon in I the face of such facts. When the peo pie can put a man like Mr. Sheatz or guard they have nothing to fear. Baby Contest. On account of the wet weather th« contest for babies under one year old, at the fair, scheduled for Wednesday afternoon was postponed until Friday I afternoon. NOTES OF INTEREST- Ridgway's epidemic of typhoid fever a ontlie decline, says the Daily Record. Evorybody should attend the fair. Lots that may interest you to be seen ;heir. D. W. Donavon has added a decided mprovement to his Hotel property in be shape of a coat of paint. Five boys between the ages of 14 and 16 years were arrested at St. Marys ast Thursday night and placed in jail vt Ridway to await trial for burglary. M. T. Stokes, editor of the Potter Enterprise bas been having a some what stormy time of it the past week. You haAe our sympathy brother, such is the life of a newspaper man. A newspaper squib makes the off hand statement that "the general opin ion that cigaret smoking injures the brain has never been proved, for those who have brains never smoke them." Landlord FredS. Kirk ofCross Fork, has brought suit against Emil Peltz for $3,000 damages, his claim being based on a shortage of water. Mr. Peltz is president of the Peltzonia Water Co. If any proof were required of the need of better Sunday school instruc tion in our community, it is furnished by The Independent in its allusion to Balaam riding on an ass into Jerusalem. Invitations are issued for the mar riage of Miss Jane Kays, daughter of Mr. and Mrs. Jos. Kaye to Edwin Mead Floyd, of Erie, to take place on the 25th at Emmanuel Church. Last week the Modern Protective As sociation paid through their local sec retary Charles Jones, claims to Effie Harmon, $60.00; Henry Haupt, $15.00; Mary Conway, $75.00. Jos. Lechner wishes to announce that he has secured the services of Louis Wies a first-class shoemaker, and is now prepared to do re pair work or any other work you may have in that line on short notice. With tLie continued advance in the price of paper stock, ink, and in fact about everything that goes into the manufacture of a newspaper, we often wonder what a publisher that is carry ing less than 200 inches of advertising (and a third of that for his own office) thinks of the "sliding scale of rates." If there is a profit in such a business, there is certainly a secret about the publishing business we have never caught onto.—-Ex. The new digest of the game and fish laws of Pennsylvania, prepared by Sec retary Kalbfus, of the State Game Commission, has just come from thf printer. It is a 240-page pamphlet, of convenient pocket size, and con tains a complete index. To meet th< widespread demand for information at to the game and fish laws, the Legisla ture authorized 100,000 copies of thif book, 50,000 to be distributed by mem bers of the House, 20,000 by the mem bers of the Senate and 30,000 by the heads of various State departments Persons desiring copies of this pamph let should apply to their Senator oi Representatives. The new law with reference to watei troughs will be of interest to the town ship supervisors and country residents The act provides that water troughf shall be six feet in length, 12 inches ir; width and 10 inches in depth in th< clear, except stone troughs, which shall not be less than two feet in length Persons who shall provide a watering trough on any public road where run ning water can be supplied for sue! troughs, and keep the same in repair shall receive $5 per annum from th< road fund. Provided: That if mor« than one trough is erected and main tained on the same road within fivt miles, but one such trough shall be en titled to the benefit of the act, and the oldest and first trough shall have the preference. When you are inclined to speak harshly to the telephone girl because she can't answer twenty calls at one time and always give you the first chance, just remember the following toast given her by an Illinois man: "Here's to the telephone girl; an em ployee who does the most work and suffers the most abuse for the money she receives, who does the most favors that are unappreciated by those upon whom they are conferred; who knows more about men than the sociologist does; more about women than the offi cers of the federation of clubs; more about the manner of children than the teacher does, and who can tell where every gentleman and lady lives. She is seen in all lands, in all climes, and ■peaks all tongues. God bless her."— Curwcnsville Mountaineer. Local news on every page. TERMS: $2.00 —$1.501N ADVANCE. THE WEATHER. PRIDAY. Showers. SATURDAY, Fair. SUNDAY, Fair. ASSETS First National Bank, EMPORIUM, PA. At the close of business Sept. 18tb 1907. $857,972.27 WON THE PHIZE. For steady growth. For good management. For establishing credit. For promptness and accuracy. For courteous treatment to all. For confidence of the people. For protection against burglary. For safe deposit boxes. For steamship service. For helping this county to grow. For the best banking facilities in a modern Banking Institution like the First National Bank, Emporium. INTEREST PAID ON CERTIFICATES OF OEPOBIT. The Dull Child. Among other interesting topics dis cussed at the Round Table conference of city teachers recently was one con cerning the dull child, says the Al toona Tribune. Parents and teachers know that he exists. Frequently he tortures- them. No less frequently they torture hins. He is at their mer cy. When he becomes unbearable they do something. But he, poor chap, has no refuge from the burden of adult boredom. He is obliged to Bubmit to overwhelming authority and power. It was brought out by the discussion that the dull lad is not always the feeble and profitless man. One of the speakers half humorously, half seri ously, depreciated the existence of un usual "brightness" among children. The infant genius usually disappoints the hopes of his friends. He becomes an adult inanity. On the other hand tho blockhead of the schools often be comes the man of affairs. In such cases it may have been the teacher who was the blockhead. Such things sfre not impossible. The child whom the ignorant parents or the careless teacher puts down as a dullard may simply be misunderstood. There are children whose timidity and sensitiveness throw them into a per fect stuper of fright when menaced by punishment for failure to obey a misunderstood or unheard command. The superficial and impatient adult who has to deal with them declares they are stubborn and rebellious, de serving severe punishment. If the punishment follow, the child may be thrown into paroxmys of fright. It is a fearful thing to deal unjustly with a timid and a sensitive little one who may also be suffering from defective bearing or imperfect vision. Croaking Again. Another shooting scrape is reported from Emporium. This time the fellow took to the streets in his night clothes, followed by shots of an irate husband. Evidently some one must have secur ed another jug of Port Allegany fire water.—Reporter. From reading the Reporter one would think that Port Allegany was free from all troubles of the above nature, but from another source we learn that a most disgraceful fight was pulled off between two women residents of that peaceful littlb village, on one of the principal streets one day last week, in which one woman was knocked down by the other, who proceeded to jump upon her in a most shameful man. ner. Family troubles are said to be the cause of all this disorder. We failed to see a report of the affair in the Report er which is always first to find fault elsewhere. "Evidently that fire water" is bad stuff. Won Easily. The High School base ball team de feated the High School team, of St. Marys, at the Park grounds yesterday afternoon 15 to 3. The boys feel very proud of their victory as they have not lost a game this season. Our first team should sit up and take notice. Found a Watch. Tuesday morning while F. P. Rentz was milking his cow he noticed some thing bright on the barn floor and upon picking it up discovered it to be a watch. How it came there is somewhat of a mystery, but it is supposed that somo of our mid-night prowlers had been in the barn and lost it. "The Toymakers." Those who live to laugh look for ward with pleasure to the coming of "The Jollities" who open in the Em porium Opera House, on Thursday, Oct. 31, for one night only, in their new musical absurdity called "The Toymakers" which is ihe great success of this season. A good company of clever people who know how to sing act and dance. NO. 31.