sn=in^l«3:=iE^i 1 Breezy| | County I I News l l — __ . - _. STERLING RUN. Dr. W. H. Mitchell, Dentist, Empori I um, Pa. Over Vogt's shoe store. Zoella Mason visited Mrs. Edmt Schwab of Cameron Tuesday. Horn, Saturday, June 13th to Geo. Moore and wife, a daughter. Mrs. Ethel Strawbridgc and daughter Lillian visited relatives at Johnsonburg this week. Mrs. Julia Strawbridgc visited friends at Dents Run, Wednesday. The Children's Day services were ob served in the M. E. Church, Sunday evening with a large crowd in attendance. The children acquitted themselves nobly in reciting and singing. Lora < > Keef'e is home for her vaca tion. Hev. i'jbersole, Mrs. W. 11. Smith, Mrs. Henry Layton and Miss Eva Barr weac Emporium visitors Tuesday. 11. F. Foster has accepted a position as operator at Huntley. He and wife , make their home at Sterling liun. Jos Furlong, who has been attending Willinovo college is home for his vaca tion. Mrs. Geo. llulsinger and son of Be- I novo visited her parents Jos. Kissell and j wife over Sunday. Dorsey Spanglcr and wife were Em- : porium visitors Tuesday. Elizabeth Arnold of Elujira, is the guest of her sister Mrs. John E. Smith. Miss Quigley of Emporium was the guest of Gladys O'Keefe over Sunday. Mrs. Maggie Chapman is visiting rela tives at McKees Rocks. Some of our citizens were awakened from their slumbers Monday night by a terrifße noise. They found out later it was only the boys having a little fun. Mrs. L. W. Spence and son moved to Lock Haven Wednesday. Mae Cranton went to Buffalo Tuesday to visit her aunt Mrs. Goodsell. The two Miss Logues of Huntley, visited relatives in town Sunday. Mrs. Mitchell is visiting her grand mother Mrs. Merrick. Mr. Lydie of Rcnovo, was the guest of James Furlong and wife over Sunday. I)r. W. H. Mitchell, Dentist, Empori um, Pa. Over Vogt's shoe store. BLUE BELT.. HUNTLEY. Dr. W. H. Mitchell, Dentist, Empori" um, Pa. Over Yogt's shoe store. The four year old daughter of W. R. Smith is very ill with liver trouble. Dr. Beale of Driftwood is attending her. John L. Johnson was a business caller at Driftwood on Saturday. The east and west ends had a hot game of ball Sunday; score 2 to 3in favor of the cast enders. The boys looked fine in their new uniforms. There is some talk of starting a team on Grove Hill in the near future. Elmer Hill of Grove Hill, was calling on friends in town Monday. Mr. Chandler of Potato Creek was a business caller in town Tuesday. Levi 11. Smith called on friends in Hicks Run Saturday. Operator Croop, who has been work ing at the tower since March has resigned his position and gone to Buffalo where he has a position as chaffeur for Jacob Dold. the meat king. Operator 11. F. Foster of Sterling Run has taken his place. Operator F. J. Confer was a caller in town Tuesday. Miss Sadie Johnson of Renovo return ed home on Friday after a week's visit with relatives here. I). W. Eastman and men arc finishing the last lumber shipments from Big Run and will have all their lumber moved by Friday. On account of poor health the Rev. Mr. llazlet of Castle Garden has resign ed his charge on that circuit and will re to his home at Houghton, N. Y. His place will be filled by a young minister from the latter place. Thomas Kilbourne, the popular um pire secured a fine string of trout on Sat urday. Nothing under 10 inches. \\. W. Johnson was a business caller in Emporium Monday. Mrs. M. M. Hill of Medix Run is visiting her daughter Mrs. W. R. Smith this week. Dr. W. If. Mitchell, Dentist, Empori um, Pa. Over Yogt's shoe store. J. P. s. Stomach Troubles. Many remarkable cures of stomach troubles have been effected by Chamber lain's Stomach and Liver Tablets. One man who had spent over two thousand dollars for medicine and treatment was cured by a few boxes of these tablets. Price, 25 cents. Samples free at L. Tag gart's drug store. Dr. H. W. Mitchell, dentist, Empori- ! um, Pa. Over Yogt's Shoe Store. DeWitt's Kidney and Bladder Pills are prompt and thorough and will in a very short time strengthen the weakened kidneys. Sold by R. C. Dodson. [ A Book on Wrestling. There has just been issued from the press of Richard K. Fox, Franklin Square, New York, one of the most valuable and comprehensive treatise on wrestling ever published. World's champion wrestler Frank Ciotch lias I written a book about the art, which | contains everything that is of interest | to enthusiasts. A special chapter is i devoted to training and another to the I career of the conquerer of Hacken- I schmidt. It contaius fifty excellent j I half-tone illustrations, showing all hi* ! principal holds, including the famous ' toe hold. Portraits are shown of the best known mat artists. It is No. 20, of Fox's Athletic Library, and will be sent to any address for 10 cents; post age 3 cents extra. Cellar Entered. The party who entered the cellar of my residence, one night recently, tak- I ing a quanity of articles therefrom will save themselves trouble and exposure if they do not return same by Monday night next. Mrs. Peter O'Mally, who saw the party, has given us the infor mation. A word to the wifo should be sufficient. W. 11. WEAVER. Wrong Name. Miss Mary McGrain, who entertain •ed a number of her young lady friends at a pic-nic in Walker's Grove, a few ; days ago, has reason to bo vexed at the PRESS. Our reporter gave Miss Pearl McGrain the credit of giving the party. Of course our office force are all vexed at themselves on account of the | error. Blind Torn Dead. "Blind Tom," the noted negro musi cian, died atlioboken, N. J., last Satur day. The poor slave, after making fortunes for others, was allowed to die in poverty, or rather depending on the charity of friends. Lost. On last Saturday, P. M., a brown purse containing papers and a sum of money. A liberal reward will be paid by leaving samo at the PRESS office. MRS. E. M. NEWTON. Farm for Sale. 150 acre farm on. Clear Creek, 70 acres improved. With crops and part of cattle. For terms apply to 11. H. Mullin, Emporium ,or at the farm. C. W. HALL, 18-3t. Emporium, Pa. For Sale. A good working horse and one driv ing horse. GEO. KENWOKTHY, 18-3t. Sterling Run, Pa. Benton and Barton. In the "Thirty Years In the United States Senate," by Thomas Hart lien ton, Missouri's famous raited States senator, there is scant mention of Ben ton's colleague from Missouri, David Barton. The only place in which his name occurs is where Senator Benton gives the roll call of the senate, and Barton's name of course is therein contained. Benton undertook to pun ish Barton by ignoring him and thus relegate the iirst United States sena tor from Missouri to oblivion. Barton had brought about Benton's election to the senate. Barton was first named by the legislature, and there was a long contention as to the second seuator ship. Finally Barton's friendship for Benton brought about Benton's elec tion. Later the two quarreled over the appointment of an Indian agent in the far west and drifted further and fur ther apart. Finally the relations be tween the two senators became such that they scarcely spoke to one an other when they met.—Kansas City Star. The Injured One. A gentleman owning a sugar estate in Demerara went out to visit it for the first time. The day after his arrival he stood watching the punts bringing the cane home. A young negro boy who was driving the mules, wishing to increase the speed of them, struck one Of them with ids whip. The mule promptly responded by launching out with his heels and dealt the boy a kick on tlie head which stretched him on the ground, where he lay rubbing his woolly pate on the spot where the kick had been received. "Is lie hurt? Is lie hurt?" cried the planter in alarm. A full grown negro, hearing the expressions of concern, sprang forward hastily and, raising the mule's heels, shouted out: "No, boss: That mule liini walk tendah !'<>' a day or two, but him no hurt!"— Chambers' .Tonrnn 1 A number ot rooms, with use of bath i or rent. Apply to Frank F. Day. 41-tf. The Best Pills Ever Sold. "After doctoring 15 years for chronic indigestion, and spending over two hun dred dollars, nothing has done me as much good as Dr. King's New Life Pills. [ consider them the best pills ever sold,'' writes B. F. Ayscue, ot lngleside, N. C. Sold under guarantee at all drug stores. 25c. NOTICE. N OTICE is hereby given that the annual meet ing of the stockholders of the Novelty In candescent Lamp Company, for the election of directors and officers and the transaction of such other business as may come before them, will be held on Monday, the nth day of July, HK)B, at tliree o'clock, P. M., at the office of the company in Emporium, Pa. JOSEPH KAYE, Secretary. Emporium, Pa. June 17, 1908.—18-3t. CAMERON COUNTY PRESS, THURSDAY, JUNE 18, 1908. Keep your Picnic Supplies on a "Picnic Shelf." They who go a-picnicking must needs consider the question of lunch, and it greatly helps the preparations for a I day's jaunt if all the packing material I and all the favorite picnic recipes are j kept in one place in the kitchen cup- j board, just, as one keeps an "emerg- | ency shelf" forcompany. When Sum- I mer approaches arrange also a "|>icuie shelf" and the preparing and packing ! | of a lunch will lose all its terrors. There should be some big sheets of ! heavy brown paper, one of which, neat- j ly folded, should be putin the bottom of the basket. This is to be the table cloth. Then there should be a sup ply of paper napkins, and also a sup ply of paraffine paper in which to wrap the eatables. If you do not live near a storewhich sells paraffinepaper,save all the linings from your cracker boxes. There should be two inexpensive salt and pepper shakers, a corkscrew for j the ginger ale bottles, some drink- J ing glasses or cups and a few knives, [ forks and spoons.—The July Delin- j oator. DeWitt's Witch Hazel Salve. It is 1 especially good lor pills. 150 sure to get I DeWitt's. Sold by 11. C. Dodson. Road Improvement. Calcium Chloride for Dust Prevention on Public Highways. Much attention is now being devoted to the general subject of road improve ment. Among other features that have received careful thought is the desirability of finding an inexpensive means of keeping down the dust 011 much traveled public highways, park roads, etc., other than by the use of water. Roads sprinkled with water require such treatment daily and often- j erin hot dry weather, to keep them in good condition. The use of oil on such roads was a marked stop in advance; but this has certain disadvantages, among others the cost of application, the offensive odor and the fact that it injures the rubber tires on vehicles, etc., and has an injurious effect upon hox-ses' hoofs. ! The use of calcium chloride remedies these difficulties in an efficient and comparatively inexpensive manner. A road sprinkled with calcium chloride will, for a long period, remain damp and hence dustless; because having a strong affinity for moisture, calcium chloride absorbs, during the hours o* evening and night, whatever moisture it may have lost during the day. The suggestion for its use came from Brunner, Mond & Co., of Northwich, Cheshire, England, who operate the Solvay Process there and who induced i the Surveyor or Engineer on the North wich Urban District Council to make a series of carefully conducted experi- | ments. These proving highly success ful, the following report was made: "The effect as a dust-layer is satisfac- i tory. It has been my opinion for a j long time that a cheap material which would allow of frequent application j was the only one that would be accep table to the public authorities, consid- I oriug the present construction of inac- ! adamized roadway. The liquor has the characteristic of absorbing the moisture from the at mosphere, and consequently the evapo ration, which is a feature in the use of water, is eliminated, with the result that each night the road surface re gains the amount of moisture, thus prolonging the effect of the treatment. It also has a decided advantage over water when considering of the cost of maintaining and cleansing the roads, to say nothing of the advantage which might be claimed from a "Public Health" point of view." The advantages in the use of this so lution for race tracks, parade grounds, railroad and shop yards and other places where dust rises freely, must at once be apparent. A 20 per cent, solution (1.200 specific gravity) is made by using 3 lbs. of 1 [SPRING CLOTHES 1 | Perfect Fitting, Better Tailored j I and More Stylish Clothing j Than you will find elsewhere for the same price—our stock of TOP GOATS, | I SUITS and CRAVENETTS ready—come see them. We are showing many novelties § I in garments for Men and Young Men as well as for the youngsters. Children's Suits Men's Suits Topcoats and Raincoats $1.50 up to $6.50 $7.50 up to $22.50 $lO up to $25 Stetson, Broadway T T r\ o Cluett, Monarch, Gold Special and Samobin J <iS P e! JTjL<IFFIS, and Silver Dress Shirts I Opposite Post Office, EMPORIUM, PA. SI.UU tO $1.50 j Hats, Spring Styl CS Where the Good Clothes Come From. J New Spring Neckwear 25c to 50c. £ "Solvay" 75 per cent, calcium chloride , per gallon of solution required; or a heavier solution of say, 40 per cent. ; could be made and used more sparing : I ly, this, in course of time, becoming I diluted to 20 per cent. Calcium chlor j ide can be had for this purpose in sev ! eral forms, among others, in the three I here named: Ist. The 75 per cent, solid in 635- j pound iron drums, which is stored at ! over 50 points in the United States and Canada. 2nd. The 75 per cent, granular in i 325 pound wooden barrelß, which can be had at about 30 storage points. 3rd. The 40 per cent, solution, in 4500-gallon tank cars, furnished by the shippers without charge and returned free when empty, by the railroad com panies, and in 110-gallon iron drums, which are returnable for credit when empty. The 75 per cent, solid is the cheapest J form; the 75 per cent, granular costs a J little more, but does not require to be ! broken up and dissolves more readily; | while the 40 per cent, solution is the most convenient for nse and, at all points to which the freight rates are not high, is reasonably cheap and on JfU' ////.'//«'i^,' f f Vic'?=? ( l//(-'(•'/;i•'■'! W'lui- '■ W. :M'< if&A " ' i □ i t*iksi U,, " 1,!l I! i ?• -rs-:* *"*?*• fT** W jf 1 )g[ *. \66 #•*» w-j »-»* A -f v^-i» uc i A //V;Wy'2 'Sfipt... 31 I ifesd/ PfV QlA&s^ #P ? t liw *» Self-Hedueino j CORSET Sflßre via BEFORE having your p \) NEW QDWNS FITTED" || I \ HAT'S good advice; for no \BBBlF\in\ liWlf xQl' I i iPTCv \ hL J woman has ever yet rc wHf r\ / ' \li \>l>' fill 5 V \ duced her abdomen, with ]• \Wm \U- VI LJ II rerP 111 I A N > V comfort and perfect safety, by ; • «| Vlfi fW \ \ * h ° use «* ««y corset e/eWg H i&mmi't \if \m HU \ ( Ncs&.c-Soli-■>Reducing, fi /JBMI IIL m lk \ <3pour WOMEN to I 891 B9I ty/M&L: // / Il\ \ 112 )£*> follow the ;jr?vaili«g rr.oile of jj /M&WJfMh\ *i\ WLf:/ / I l\i \ \ slcttdcracss bctcw the 6 mm mm Hm n /JSmffffl^l///fjttjkSlS li H iiy>T / I / In V 1 perfectly comfortable, by wearing the t Ifflikititilill&Mh>' '■ n WT:! I I tI I VI Nemo Self-Reducing Corset iu the new jj \ M\ "FiatninfrHack" models. J BFmn&K-V:\' \ ''/ / ! H ! ( ufc, \ of luxurious tastes, who pay § /Mfl&SfflJti}!||^j| * | a | t'/vLx vJI/ SIO.OO for our superb No. 1000, I ! \--v-/ / v 0 will get a corset far more shapely, I ■'■'fe. ■ . L \.■ ■' / /yiiJ\S. stylish, comfortable and durable than the M'^SBSr'j' V"-'- lii / If best French corset they can buy at W Mnr.Fi i / <ioublc the price -3 oa g V-/ stout women, who Hi^i'f' JtU P I 1 ) fancied that they wast have ' *'f M to aa I | their corsets made to order, are ',' W | J.UU II now saving more than half their "# El U money and enjoying greater com* M vft I H «j} fort., by wearing the famous Nemo Self : Jf ( 'I > Reducing Corset. i ink fi WHY does your dressmaker recommend this corset? (I |WP| Because it saves hdV work, and enables her to give yotl | &\ \;~4 the best figure you ever had. Rk ) J No. SI2, for tfie tall stout woman .... 1 WB| ''i / No. 320, tail stout, with "Flatning-Back" . . <?o | \ m No. 314, for the short stout woman .... * No. 318, short stout, with "Flatning-Back" . . \Mw!k No. 516, for the tail stout woman . . . . | \ No. 517, tall stout, with "Flatning-Back" . . { a>n aa '«•%' ~ llijmjjjjj&j No. 518, for the short stout woman ... . j v; No. 515, with Nemo Bust Supporters . . j No. 1000, with duplex straps and "Flatning-Back" SIO.OO JjJlftK&.M ipfc T/"T TTV Emporium's Finest XV UEI l M Xli Dry Goods Store i the whole the best especially where j large quanties are needed, j Calcium chloride solution is applied | with any ordinary watering cart. A road to which calcium chloride has not previously been applied should be sprinkled thoroughly twice over with , | this solution an interval one day being I j allowed to elapse between the first and 1 second treatment. For the first treatment, a length of 100 yards of road 8 yards wide, that is | i 800 square yards, will require about [ 800 gallons of solution, 500 gallons for the first and 300 gallons for the second sprinkling on the next day. For sub j sequent treatments, one thorough ! sprinkling will suffice each time, using I about 300 gallons of,above solution per ! 800 square yards; this will probably have to be repeated during the ordi- I nary sprinkling season about four j times on an average; it is imposible, of i course, to give a definite figure, be cause much depends upon the dryness or otherwise of the season, the quality of the road and the amount and char acter of the traffic. The above solution, is highly andors ed by all who have used it. We publish 1 the article by request. Hundreds of people who suffer from backache, rheumatism. lame back, lum bago and similar ailments are not aware that these are merely symptoms of kid ney trouble, and to lie relieved they must correct the cause, l'ineules lor the kid | rieys, pleasant aud easy to take, are read j ily absorbed by the stomach and blood | act directly on the kidneys, bringing quick relief to backache and other symp ! to ins of kidney and bladder derange i uieats. A dose of l'ineules at bed time brings relief. 30 days' trial SI .00 and I guaranteed or money back. Sold at 11. j C. Dodson's drug store. Hm No Need of Suftermg From Rheuma tism. It is a mistake to allow rheumatism t< become chronic, as the pain can always be relieved, and in most cases a cure ef fected by applying Chamberlain's Pain Balm. The relief from pain which it af fords is alone worth many times its cost. It makes sleep and rest possible. Even in cases of long standing this liniment should be used on account of the relief which it affords. Do not be discouraged until you have given it a trial. Many sufferers have been surprised and delight ed with its pain relieving qualities. 25 and 50 cent sizes for sale by L. Taggart.
Significant historical Pennsylvania newspapers