GctnQcpor) 'Ooui)ly j^Vess SSTABMSHUD 8V C. B.GOULD. HENRY H. MULLIN, . u ind Manager. PUBLISH til» WVtilU THURSDAY TERMS OK SUBSCRIPTION: Per year $2 00 U paid ina(U:wi' >. Ji SO ADVERTISING RATES. Advertisement are publish edat the rate of one lollar per square for oue insertion and fifty cents per square lor each subsequent insertion. Rates by tue year or for six or three months are ow ana uniform, and will be furnished on appli cation Legaland Official Advertising pei square, three lues or less, $2 00: each subsequent insertionso cents per square. Local noticesten cents per line for onei nsertion, Ave cents perline foreacnsubsequentconsecutivp Insertion. Obituary notices over five lines, ten cents per l»e. Simpleannouncementsof births, marriages and deaths will be inserted free. Business Cards, five lines or less per year over five lines, at the regular rates of advertising No local inserted for less than 75 cls.per issue. JOB PRINTING. The Job department of the PRESS is complete. And affords facilities for doing the best class of work. PARTICULAR ATTENTION PAID TO Law Printing. No paper willhe discontinued until arrearages are paid, except at the option of the publisher. Papers sent out of the county must be paid for In advance. *#-No advertisements will he accepted at less ban the price for fifteen words. ##-Religious notices free. Calendar of Coming Events, March 14 —Last day to tile nomina tion papers for state and county offices. April 11—Fall primary election. April 27—Dedication of Bucktail monument at Driftwood. Stop that tickling Cough, Dr. Shoop's Cough Cure will surely stop it, and with perfect safety. It is so thoroughly harmless that Dr. Shoop tells mothers to use nothing else even with very young babies. The wholesome green leaves and tender stems of a lung-heal ing mountainous shrub, furnish the curative properties to Dr Shoop's Cough Cure. It calms the cough, and heals the sensitive bronchial mem branes. No opium, no chloroform, nothing harsh used to injure or sup press. Demand DrlShoop's. Take no other. Sold by all dealers. Suffering and Dollars Saved. E. S. Loper. of Marilla, N. Y., says: "I am a carpenter and have had many severe cuts healed by Bucklen's Arnica Salve. It has saved me suffering and dollars. It is by far the best healing salve I have ever found." Heals burns, sores, ulcers, fever s res, eczema and piles. 25c at all druggists. Kodol is a scientific preparation of vegetable acids with natural digestants and contains the same juices found in a healthy stomach. Each dose will digest more than 3,000 grains of good food. Sold by It. C. Dodson. It will be unnecessary for you to <ro through a painful, expensive operation for Piles if you use ManZan. Put up in collapsible tube with nozzle,. ready to apply to the soreness and inflammation. For any form of Piles, price 50c, guaran teed at R. C. Dodson's drug store. 3tn Bert Barber, of Elton, Wis., says:"l have only taken four di.scs of your Kid ney and Bladder Fills and they have done for me more good than other medicine has over done. Mr. Barber refers to De- V\ itt s Kidney and Bladder Fills. They are sold by It. C. Dodson. DeVi'itt - Carboiized Witch Ilazel Salve is especially good lor piles. Sold by It. C. Dodson. A weak .Stomach, means weak Stom ach nerves, always. And this is also true of the Heart and Kidneys. It's a pity that sick ones continue to drug the Stomach or stimulate the Heart and Kidneys The weak nerves, not the organs themselves, need the help. This explains why Dr. Shoop's Restora tive has, and is promptly helping so many sick ones. It goes direct to the cause oi'these diseases. Test this vital truth, and see. Sold by all dealers. "I trust this may be read by many suf ferers from kidney and bladder trouble," writes Mrs. .Joe King, of Woodland, Tex. "I sutler'd lour years and could find nothing ;, give even temporary relief. Our druggist at last inducod me to try your M 0 days days' treatment of Finlues for SI.OO. This one bottle has cured me and money could not buy the value it has been to me. Guaranteed at It. C. Dodson's drug store. 3m I-or That Terrible itching. Eczema, tetter and salt rheum keep their victims in perpetual torment. The application of Chamberlain's Salve will instantly allay this itching, and many cases have been cured by its use. For sale by L. Taggart. No need to fear coughs and colds this year as you can obtain Bees Laxative Cough Syrup now from your dealer. This is good news to mothers who fear croup and whooping cough. It is a gentle laxative that expells the poison from the system in the natural way. Cuts the phlegm and clears the head. Guaranteed at R. C. Dodson's drug store. !3m FOR RENT OR SALE. A number of rooms, with use of bath for rent. Apply to Frank F. Day. 41. tf. Seven room house, with reception hall; West Sixth street; city water and gas; for rent. Apply to A. H. Shaffer, Ridgway, Pa. 47-tf. WASHINGTON LETTER. | From our Regular Correspondent.] Washington, Feb. 22, l!M)N. The President lias once more I taken a step wlii :'.i has startled ( and astounded the capitalists and some of the most influential lead ers of his party and which, never theless, promises on second thought : to make for the interest of the | country at large, and of business men as well as wage workers. L ■ refer to the letter which the Presi | dent recently addressed to the In j terstate Commerce Commission in j structing the Commission carefully | to investigate the receipts and dis bursements of the railroads in or j der that it may be in a position to : act intelligently should it be called ! upon to intervene between railway I managers and their employees. Those in a position best to judge are now of the opinion that the President's letter will have two very beneficial results. First, by warning the railroads in advance that the administration, and through it the public, will be in a position to judge whether or not ! they are warranted by any decrease ! in business in decreasing the pay i of their employees, the letter will, j it is believed, operate as a deter- I rent to railway managers who ! might be disposed to make niater- I ial reductions in wages; second, by so deterring the railway managers from acting hastily and so contri buting themselves to check busi ness, it will, it is maintained, serve to tide over a temporary sion which has naturally followed the ilnaneial stringency and which has hit the railroads later than the manufacturers, while in a compar atively short time this depression will have passed and there will then be no occasion to reduce wages. Speaking of railroads, it now seems certain the Aldricli financial bill will,by amendment,be made to take the first step toward ascertain ing the physical value of the rail road properties. English Spavin Liniment removed j Hard, Soft or Calloused Lumps and Blemishes from horses; also Blood Spavins, Curbs, Splints, Sweeney, Ring Bone, Stifles, Sprains, Swollen Throats, ! Coughs, ete. Save §SO by use of one bottle. A wonderful Blemish Cure, i Sod by L.Taggart, druggist. 32-lyr I- OCKET BOOK LOST.— Alady's pocket I book, issued by First National Bank, | was lost on Fourth street, Emporium |on Jan. 6th. Said book contained a ! sum of money, also a 1908 New Year's j card. The finder will be liberally re warded bv leaving same at PRESS »112 flee. " 48-tf. The best remedy known to-day for all ' stomach trouble is Koilol which is uuar atitccd to give prompt relief. It is ;i natural digestant; it digests what you eat, it is pleasant to take. .Sold bj R. ('. Dodson. Save Honey by Buying Chamberlain's Cough Remedy. You will pay just as much for a bottle of Chamberlain's Cough Remedy as for any of the other cough medicines, but you save money iu buying it. The sav ing is in what you get, not what you pay. The sure-to-cure you ijuality is in every bottle of this remedy, and you get good results when you take it. Buying cough medicine is an important matter. Neglected colds often develop serious con ditions, and when you buy a cough medi cine you want to be sure you arc getting one that will cure your cold. When you buy Chamberlain's Cough Remedy you take.no chances. It always cures. Price 25 and "ill cents a bottle. For sale bv L. Taggart A Ring's Dyspepsia Tablet after each meal overcomes indigestion, dyspepsia and other stomache ills. Two days' trial free. Ask our dealer. Sold at R. C. Dodson's drug store. 3m. To stop that pain in the back, that stiffness of the joints and muscles, take I'inules. They are guaranteed. Don't sufferfroni rheumatism, backache, kidney, trouble, when you get 30 days' treatment for 81.00. A single dose at bedtime proves their merit. Get them to-day Sold at R. C. Dodson's drug store. .'3m For Sale, ce » 0 t t u h rv Merry-go-Round I will sell my one-half interest in the Merry go-round that was on the Fair ground last fall at Emporium. This machine cost when new $2,100 cash. It has been run 14 months and has earn ed between $6,000 and $7,000. It is in number one condition and on account of sickness and ill health, will sell my one-half interest for $750.00 cash. The owner of other one-half interest will remain in business and is not for sale ! Address, A. F. BKMAN, 2tf Ridgway, Pa. CAMERON COUNTY PRESS. THURSDAY, FEBRT'ARY 27, 1908 MOUfJT FUJIYAMA. Japanese Pilgrimage to Its Tempesl Swept Summit. To the people of .Japan the mount Fujiyama is sacred. The meaning of the word is '"honorable mountain.' During that brief six weeks of suuiuiw when Fujiyama's wind swept sides art cliiultalile. writes A. 11. Edwards in "Kakemono," the pilgrims come in thousands, in ten thousands. They dress themselves in white from head to foot. They carry long staves ol pure white wood in their hands, each stamped with the temple crest, and in bands and companies they .climb the mountain. Always the leader at their head, his staff crowned with a tinkling mass of bells. like tiny cymbals, chants the hymn of Fujiyama. For six short summer weeks they come. Then the winds rush down, the snow falls, the tempests rage, and I.onl Fujiyama lives alone. No human being has yet stayed a winter on his summit, and even in the summer weeks the winds will blow the lava blocks from the walls of the rest bouses and sometimes the pilgrim froir the path. Fujiyama stands alone, not one peak amonj? a range, but utterly alone. I{Ls Ing straight out of the sea on one side and from the great Tokyo plain on the other, his 12,365 feet in two long curv ing lines of exquisite grace rise up and up into the blue, and not an inch of one foot is hidden of lost. It is all there, visible as a tower built on a tree less plain. It dominates the landscape. It can be seen from thirteen provinces, and from a hundred miles at sea the pale white peak of Fujiyama floats above the blue. AERIAL NAVIGATION. The First Gas Bag and the First Dir igible Balloon. On the Ist of December, 1 TSli, when the first gas balloon rose from the Tuileries, carried up by Charles and Itobert, tiie Marquis de Villeroy, an octogenarian and skeptic, declared it was tempting God himself. lie was rolled in ills armchair to a window of his chateau to witness the impossibili ty of such an ascension. But the mo ment the aeronaut, gayly saluting the spectators, rose in the air, the old man, passing suddenly from the most com plete incredulity to unlimited faith in the power of genius, fell upon his knees and exclaimed: "O men, ye will find the secret of never dying! And It will be when I am dead!" The public, easily confounding the atmospheric with the astronomic heav ens, already hailed the day when the aeronaut would continue his aerial course to the moon, to Venus, to Mars or Jupiter. Pierre Gitl'ard, then Dnpuy de Lome, tried the first dirigible balloons. Later Captains Henard and Krebs in their aeroplane, La France, went from Meu don to Paris and back at the same time that (iaston Tissandier was car rying out his fine experiments. But ail progress was soon stopped by the weakness of the motors compared to their weight. Nothing further could be done until the arrival of the explosive motor. In fact, it was the improvement in auto mobiles which won us the conquest of the air. Hands and Feet. It is said that Disraeli was prouder of his small hands than of all his great mental accomplishments. This was presumably because they were badges of aristocracy in their evidence that he had not been brought up to labor, and he worshiped aristocracy. And small feet of the same character—evi dences that the possessor did not go barefoot when a child. Generations of carefully shod children of the nobility developed this characteristic of those of "gentle blood" as distinguished from the commonalty. But such proofs of superiority were not meekly endured. Indue time brainy commoners discov ered that the"artistic hand" was not small, but long and slender, and then came the athlete multitude, who scorn small hands and feet as evidences of effeminacy.—lndianapolis Star. Gray Hairs In Wall Street. "It seemed to me down in New York the other day," remarked a Cleveland er who had just returned from tlie me tropolis, "that one might almost rec ognize Wall street and the financial region by the number of gray haired young men you see: l had occasion to be In several offices on Wall street the other day, and I honestly believe more than half of the young men I saw had gray hair. I noticed the same thing along the street. It may have been just a coincidence, but I couldn't help wondering if they would have been gray just as soon if they had been at some other game for the last few years."—Cleveland Plain Dealer. Stupid Fellow. "Mary said 'No' to me last night," sighed Peter Sloman, "but I don't be lieve she could honestlv tell why she did it." ', "Oh, yes, she could," replied his cousin Kate. "She told me." "Did she?" "Yes; she said she didn't think you'd take 'No' for an answer."—Philadelphia Press. Rome's Gormandizing. The decline of a nation commences when gormandizing begins. Itome' • collapse was well under way wh >n ulaves were thrown into the eel pits to increase the gamy flavor of the eels when they came upon the table. Success lias a great tendency to con i ireal and throw a veil over the evil j deeds of r.en. Demosthenes. RE ME DIE HAVE ARRIVED IN TOWN. No doubt you have heard of them. They are used by several millions of people throughout the United, States, and we sell them to you with a guarantee that ' if they are not what we claim we will gladly refund! your money. One remedy for each human ill. Some three years ago a number of ed by the various druggists constituting prominent retail druggists —realizing the company. that a big change was to be made in the From these, about two hundred proprietary medicine business, that the w f re selected as being the best reme* public demanded to know what the in- c {j es known to medical science for gredients were of the preparations they * UrC ' P art 'cular ailment, were advertising, and that a general The exdus.ve r.ghtstothese remcd.es , , . were then transferred to The United reform was about to take place m pro- Drug Company, which has since manu pnetary medicine manufacturing and ad- factured them in its superbly equipped vertising, formed a co-operative com- laboratories in Boston under the now pany to meet the public's demand. This famous name of" The Rexall Remedies." company was called The United Drug Note then, first of all, these facts: Co., of which the undersigned has be- J s t. " Rexall" refers, not to one rem comeoneofthetwo thousand members edy but to about two hundred— Our object was, first, to manufacture each for some one particular purpose. 8 lint of prescriptions such as we had Nobody knows better than The tried out in our stores and found to give United Drug Company druggists the the very best of results, and second, by absurdity of the "cure-all." Owning our own co-operative manufac- *> -j _ ~4 turing company we would be able to C j exa ll Remedy is a test*- know the exact formula of every prepar- 112 and proved success, selected ation we were selling, thus enabling us " r . lts conspicuous merit from many to give to the public the very best rem- class. All had established rep cdies we could find at actual manufac- stations through their continued use turing cost, plus a single retail profit. physicians before they became This enabled The United Drug Com- members of the Rexall" family, pany to escape the heavy charges for 3rd. Rexall" Remedies are sold at advertising and other expenses such as * ow Prices because they are free from have to be paid by proprietary remedies. heavy manufacturing charges, job- What was most important, it insures ting profits, and the heavy expense safety and satisfaction to our customers, bc:ng advertised separately, as because we knew just what formerly. wa are selling. The United Drug Company, which A committee of experts was ap- manufactures the F.exall Remedies, has | pointed who spent a long time in testing already scored the greatest success the merits of more than two thousand ever known in the history of the drug formulas and prescriptions recommend- business. Three of the 200 " Rexall" Remedies, one for each human ill, are: F2R CA7A3EH—SfIUCU-TONE FCJS NERVES— HSXALL "33" KAiR TGfciC _ The chi c 112 ingredients of AMERICAHITI3 ELiXiP, The famous Rexall "03" Hair {^r U t'm e irfsiS''ftvS The Rexall American ids Elix- Tonic is composed in chief of in" "'lnd'sir lninlli ' ir is a tonic nerve food composed Resorcin, Lota Naphthol and me, and barsapanlla. rlm-fly of free Phosphorus, Pilocarpi* I Gentian is recopuzed in med- Glycophosphates, IronPyro- r * • • * . I icine as oneof the greatest phosphate and Calisaya. Resorcin is one of the latest tonics ever discovered. It is r A ,. and most enective germ-killers Tone'is'lS [ftta tft 112 by a science, and in. , done is built. ucnlun com- . supplies Phosphorus to the conncc tion with Beta Naphthol. bines in high degree the tonic . H ~ A .'«»pnorus 10 uie ~ , . . . . i powers of all the known "bit- w h ic h " c an be antiseptic, a combination is them lata. «P by themVt is '""»•*• »hicl, not only destroys I . t T , * the only known preparation in the germs which rob the hair of Cubebs have long been rec- which free Phosphorus—that is its nutriment, but creates a ©<^ized as a specific in the treat- phosphorus which remains in- clean and healthy condition of Its action ""is '^pro mp ° 'an d °'its definitely uiioxudized-is used the scalp, which prevents the benefit almost invariable. In he . Gl y Co P» oS P''>atcs, actual lodgment and development of whatever part of the body the p e rve-tissuc builders, are one of new germs, inllanied or diseased condition the most recent and valuable pilocarnin is a well-known or the mucous membrane exists, £"f ISS unnS's* a B «. (orTsuSng .IfhTS recommended bSt ph? a Us natural color, rte* the loss sicians for many generations *dy tha . n th ° w ell-kn own of color has been due to a dis n, c j • Hypophosphites. ease of the scalp. It is not a cially intmduced a for its neces- .1 Ihe lroll l '> TO P h ? s P is coloring matter or dye—it pro cian\ introduced ior its neces the most easily assimilated form ,i, lces ;t s effect bv stimulating sary laxative properties. of iron wh icfi gives tone and and hair Ictso The combination of these color, and the combined alka- the scalp and ha r follicles with Glycerine and Sarsaparilla loids of Calisaya Dark have a nealth and actne life, makes Mucu-Tone a remedy tonic effect on almost all the This co m bination of cur that attacks catarrh from every functions of the body. atives mixed with alcohol as a E' S !£!r y rcst , or s s antl In compounding t hes e van- stimu i ant ,perfects the most ef build.-. the diseased tissues to ous elements, the very highest j,, v . their former health and strength, degree of pharmaceutical skill fectlv ® , V * ! i promotes digestion and creates lias been employed. 75c. anil troubles known to-day. 0 a normal appetite. Bottle, 50c. £1.50 a bottle. Bottle, 50c. " Rexall" Remedies are found oniy in the stores of druggists affiliated with The United Drug Company—only one in each town and each backs up this " Rexall" guarantee printed on every package: " This preparation is guaranteed to give satisfaction. If it does not, come back and get your money. It belongs to you, and we want you to I 4 have it." I MRS. M. A. ROCKWELL, Druggist I The Store I Keeping Open House. Everybody is welcome when we feel | good; and we feel that way only when J our digestive organs are working properly. Dr. King's New Life Pills regulate the j action of stomach, liver and bowels so j perfectly one can't help feeling good | when hi- uses these pills. 25c at all I drug stores. Pinesalve Carbolized acts like a poul- | tice, draws out inffimmation and poison, i Antiseptic healisi / F<.r <-lmt>M<d hands, ; !i| s, cuts and bur .-. !!. Dodson's drug store. .'Jm. lpiLES^ii«l ' -Hi Matt. Thompson, Sup iR .jf.radcd Schools, BtatMTille, N. C., write: •• I can .ay K j »«th<y do all y>\x claim for them." Pr. 8. M. Dcvore.la I MB Haven Rock, W • Va., writes; 44 They give universal aatij H I Mfatiion. l»r. IT. r>. Me GUI, Clarkaburg, Tenu., writes • B M"ln a practice i 23 J'' arß » ' havo found no remedy toflß | M equal your*. Pfttcs, 50 C«nt*. Samples Free. Bold Br RniflßMr p> ' nft Sol iin Emporium by L. TjggartO R. C Dodtc: j CULL FOR F ' SAMPIC ©S3O f',r for Cor , Cottin a oup> , A BEAUTIFUL FACE Bofnrp lj sini; II you h«ve pimples, blotches, I or other skin Imperfections, you £' l .r;'-. -> v can reinoTi! them aod have a clear .v ' ' HfeN jnd beautilul complexion by using I t '*%W 3EAUTYSKIN '■ J 'jT !»Makes \ ' ' ' Improves the Be'aoves oil in Imperfections. \jv t>&v or' money refunds 1. JT • .\i i •■•tump for Free Sample, \ "9* jf rtienlars ami Testimonials. V j Mention thin paper. Aflcr Using. ■'fCHESTER CHEMiCAL 'CO., .Mudison Place, Philadelphia, Pa.
Significant historical Pennsylvania newspapers