ESTABLISHED, lS6fi. Cameron County Press HENRY H. ItIUIJLITV, Editor and Proprietor ORVII.I.K PnoiiDi'ooT, Assistant and Manager. RAYMOND KLKES, Assistant Foreman. W. SCOTT STBKNKR, Assistant Local Editor. PUBLISHED EVERY THURSDAY REPUBLICAN TICKET. For Auditor General, A. E. SIBSON, of Erie County For State Treasurer. JEREMIAH H. STOBER, of Lancaster County. For Judge of the Suureme Court, ROBERT VON MOSCHZtSKER, of Philadelphia County. For Prothonotary, Register, Recorderiand Clerk of the Courts, WILLIAM LEAVITT. of Shippen. For District Attorney, FREDAUN JOHNSON, of Emporium. For Jury Commissioner, FRANK L. MILLER of Grove. Goat skins have been Tariff free all these years, hut has any one taken note of the fact that kid shoes are any cheaper than other shoes?— Cedar Rap ids "Republican." Behind the Free-Trade Hearse. The alleged Republicans, who joined hands with the Democrats, in fighting the Payne-Aldrioh law (and their sup porters) are a very, very small part of the grand old party, fortunately. They are no more Republicans, in the strict sonse of the word, than are those Democrats in Congress who openly plead and worked for Protection for industries in their repective localities. It is funny to hear Democrats taking about Republicans following their "party machine" and "voicing plat form and principles," when one con siders the long march of the Demo cracy behind the Free-Trade hearse. They have learned nothing by a long succession of hard knocks on that proposition.—Tifiln (O.) "Tribune." EVER WATCHFUL. A Little Care Will SaveJJMany Em •porlum Readrs Future Trouble. ■ Watch the kidney secretions.) **'" "™ See that they have the amber hue of health; The discharges not excessive or infre quent; Contain no "brick-dust like" sedi ment. Doan's Kidney Pills will do this for you. They watch tin; kidneys and cure them when they're sick. Mrs. E. L. Rendt, Fifth St., Empori um, Pa., says: "I suffered from dis ordered kidneys for years and the secre tions were irregular and painful in pas sage. I also had backache aud pains through tiiy loins and was unable to rest at night on account of these annoyances. When I learned of Doan's Kidney Pills I obtained a box from Taggart's drug store and they gave me almost immediate relief. My back dot-s not ache now, I am able to sleep well and the other sym ptoms have disappeared. I obtained more relief from Doan's Kidney Pills in a short time than from any other remedy I ever used." For sale by all dealers. Price 50 cents. Foster-Milburn Co., Buffalo, New York, sole agents. Remember the name— Doan's—and take no other. No Laughing Allowed There. Neither men nor women are allowed to iauiih when their nerves are shattered. That is their nerves don't allow them to. Rut one box of Sexine Pills will make you feel better. SI a box; six boxes 85, v;ith lull guarantee lor any form of nerve weakness iti men or women. Address or call on R. <j. I.oJson druggist, where they sell all the principal remedies and do not ;iub*ti'ute. 7th SEASON Big Scenic Production in Play Form of "The best New England Story Ever Written" Quincy Adams Sawyer AND Mason's Corner Folks Large and Excellent Company Opera House, Oct. 12 H Big Production ol Great Dramatic '• Mrtti Miss Petticoats Dramatized from the Popular Book of the Same Name. Will be presented by A Sterling Company Giving the Breath of Life and \ to all the Pathos and Humoi of this Masterly Play At Opera House Soon. | Prices 25c, 50c and 75c, SI.OO. \ > In the Old Germanic Wilderness. Leaving Mummelsee on a misty morning, you enter a green underworld of strange dew bedlainoud brilliance, skirt the head of a deep southward looking valley and emerge upon a sunny open plateau beyond Eckle and ;ook down upon Wlldsee, circled by the 3ark pines of an untouched forest that Itretches away to the blue and distant hills. It Is easy here to Imagine your self back In the heart of the old Ger manic wilderness, in the heroic days when Ilagen slew Siegfried with a coward's blow. The morning sun glints upon bright spear tops among the trees and the wind brings snatches of rough war songs shouted by barbarian voices. Your heart swells with the lust of bat tle and the chase, and if you have German blood in your veins it calls hack through the dark middle ages to that dim and mystic youthday of the world when heroes met at the Raven na Schlacht. Within the hour you find yourself back in the twentieth century among motorcars drawn up beside the hostelry at Ruhestein, where the Hohenweg drops into the common place and crosses the government ma radam before climbing the steep side of the Rothe Schliffkopf.—From "A Black Forest Pathway." by Frederick Van Beuren. Jr.. in Scribner's. Verdi and LSismarck on Titles. Tile composer Verdi was offered a title of nobility by King Victor Em manuel. It was intended that lie should be created Marquis or Comte do Bus seto, after the estate upon which he lived. The composer refused the offer energetically. He considered that Verdi was somebody and that the Marquis de Busseto would be nobody. Even Bismarck was unable to parry a blow of this character. When the young emperor broke with him he conferred upon him the title of Duke of Lauenbourg. Bismarck received the parchment with this exclamation: "A pretty name! It will be handy for traveling incognito." Some days after a parcel arrived at Varzln bearing the nddress "Mme. la Duchesse de Lauenbourg." Bismarck, to whom it was delivered, being then at table, arose and, offering the letter to his wife, remarked iron ically: "Duchess, enchanted to make your acquaintance!" Faithful to His Trust. I was waiting near the elevator in the factory building for my friend to come down when I noticed a small boy sitting in one corner of the hall hold ing a large, thick sandwich. He eyed the sandwich lovingly for a long time, then he carefully lifted off the top slice of broad, took out a piece of dill pickle, ate it and replaced all as be fore. In a few seconds lie again re moved the top piece, extracted a piece of pickle and a piece of meat and re placed the top. Again and again the performance was repeated until ail the pickle and almost all the meat were gone, the sandwich, however, appear ing Intact as in the beginning. "Why don't you eat up your sand wich and not pick at it in that way?" I asked the boy with some curiosity. "Why," lie answered, looking up with great innocence, "it ain't my sandwich."—Woman's Homo Compan ion. Where Women Swim Best. "The Korean women are the best swimmers in the world." said a life guard. "The Korean pearl (Tiving is in their hands. They swim—they don't boat—they swim out to fhe pearl fish eries of Quelpart, lugging baskets with them. After this swim of half an hour they dive down fifty feet and fetch up queer one shelled pearl oysters as big as babies. They dive till their baskets are full—the baskets are corked to keep them afloat—and after three or four hours' work they swim back homo with their catch. The big one shelled oysters are valuable as pearl mines and as food too. A half dozen Koreans will sit down to an oyster as gayly as you or I sit down to a broiled lobster. Sometimes when the great shellfish Is eaten raw it quivers and moans slightly as the knife is plunged into It."—Philadelphia Bulletin. The Man and the Lion. "When I was once in danger from a lion," said an old African explorer, "I tried sitting down and staring at him, as I had no weapons." "llow did it work?" asked his com panion. "Perfectly. The lion didn't even of fer to touch me." "Strange! How do you account for it?" "Well, sometimes I've thought it was because I sat down on a branch of a very tall tree." Very Queer. "My husband has been out late every evening this week attending important *lub meetings." "Yes, so has mine. They belong to the same club, you know." "Why, how queer! My husband says he hasn't seen your husband in six months!"— Cleveland Leader. The Way She Dressed Him. "What do you want to bo when you grow up?" was asked of a small boy by the visitor. "Oh," said lie, "I want to be a itan, but I think mamma wants me to be j a lady."—Ladies' Home Journal. The Experienced Father. Wife—My dear, the nursery needs re decorating. What would you suggest i for the walls? Husband—Corrugated i iron.—Woman's Home Companion. « A Food Expert. "What is a food expert?" "Any man who can make his wages | | bu v t'iioush for the family table."— j T Ledger. cameron;county press, Thursday, octoher 7 ,1909. Autumn Arbor Day. HAIL TO THE TREES. "Patient and generous, mothers of mankind. Arching the hills, the minstrels of the wind, Spring's glorious flowers and summer's balmy tents, A sharer in man's free and happier sense The trees bless all, and then, brown mantled stand The sturdy prophets of agolden land." Daring May of last year meetings were held at the White House in Wash ington for the purpose of promoting the conservation of our natural re sources. These meetings were attend ed by many of our leading statesmen, scientists and captains of industry. In the opening address the President said: "We began with an unapproached heritage of forests; more than half the timber is gone. We began with coal fields more extensive than those of any other nation, and with iron ores re garded as inexhaustible, and many ex perts now declare that the end of both coal and iron is in sight." The ultimate failure of the supplies of iron and coal is not more of a menace to the future of our nation than the gradual destruction of the soil by floods and freshets and its exhaustion by im proper methods of farming. We de rive most of our food from the fields and the streams, from the garden, the orchard and the forest. The want of fuel may bo supplied by the use of water power to generate electricity that can be changed into light, heat and motive power. On the other hand, it takes decades of growth to re produce an orchard, or ji forest, and ten thousand years to form soil a foot in depth. It is claimed that forests help to con dense the vapors of the sky into clouds and rainfall. They surely aid in regu lating the flow of the water in our streams and rivers, and in lessening the size and frequency of the floods and freshets which carry off silt and soil and thereby diminish the fertility of the land. The value of trees for shade, for beauty, for fuel, for timber and for other economic purposes should be emphasized by every teacher. The planting and care of trees, their pro tection from fire, insects and other enemies, the wonderful processes of budding and grafting should be taught in every school. The sin of robbing or marring a tree, a shrub or a flower unless it has something to give which one needs, should be pointed out again and agin. Verily, there is abundant reason for observing Arbor Day in the fall, as well as in the spring of the year. To perpetuate the custom of observ ing Arbor Day at that season of the year when all the schools are in session, FRIDAY, OCTOBER 22, 1909, is hereby designated as Autumn Arbor Day; and all who are connected with the schools are urged to observe the day by the planting of trees and by other suitable exercises. NATHAN C. SCHAEFFER, State Supt. of Public Instruction. Harrisburg, Pa., September 15, 1909. Latest Popular Music. Miss May Gould, teacher of piano forte has received a full line of the lat est and most popular sheet music. All the popular airs. Popular and class ical music. Prices reasonable. 44-tf. In the Wake of Envy. Where envying is, there is confusion and every evil work.—James. Are You This Man? We are looking for just ONE big, broad-gagued man of business ability in this county to act as our special representative, to look after our present customers and to add new ones. To the right man we have a mighty good proposition to make — pleasant employment at profitable wages which will be paid every week. But we must have a real worker, a man who knows how to work and who likes to work because in so doing he is benefitting himself. If you are this kind of a man, write us at once lor com plete details which will open the way to a bigger business success for you. Address your letter to the Sales Manager of Stark Bro's Nurseries & Orchards Co. Louisiana Missouri IT. S, A. PENNSYLVANIA RAILROAD SPECIAL AUTUMN EXCURSION TO WASHINGTON, D. C. Friday, October 8, 1909 Round $8.95 Trip f,om Emporium PROPORTIONATE RATES FROM OTHER POINTS Tickets will.be good going on regular trains on date named and to return within ten days including date of excursion. RETURNING, tickets will lie good to stop-off at BALTIMORE or PHIL ADELPHIA, affording 1111 opportunity to visit ATLANTIC CITY. For tickets and additional Information apply to Ticket Agents. J. K WOOD, GEO. W. BOYD, Passenger Traffic Manager. General Passenger Agent No. 1077-33-21. M ..... —I J A Liberal Offer i The Emporium Drug Co., Guarantee , | a Relief for Dyspepia. If the Remedy Fails it Costs i Nothing. To unquestionably prove to the peo ple that Indigestion and Dyspepsia can ' be permanently relieved and that Bex all Dyspepsia Tablets will bring about ' this result, we will furnish the medi cine absolutely free it it fails to give satisfaction to any one using it. • The remarkable success of Rexall ' Dyspepsia Tablets is due to the high degree of scientific skill used in devis ing their formula as will as to the care in their manufacture, whereby the well ' known properties of Bismuth Subnitrate and Pepsin have been combined with r Carminatives and other agents. Bismuth-Subnitrate and Pepsin are constantly employed and recognized 1 by the entire medical profession as in valuable in the treatment of indigestion 1 and dyspepßia. 3 The Pepsin used in Rexall Dyspepsia 3 Tablets is prepared by a process which 3 develops its greatest efficiency. Pep sin supplies to the digestive apparatus one of the most important elements of 3 the digestive fluid, and without it the 3 digestion and assimilation of food are j impossible. The carminatives possess properties ' which aid in relieving the disturbances and pain caused by undigested food. r This perfect combination of these in " gradients makes a remedy invaluable for the complete relief of indigestion and dyspepsia. We are so certain of this that we urge you to try Rexall Dyspepsia ' Tablets on our own personal guaran tee. Three sizes, 25 cents, 50 cents and SI.OO. Remember you can obtain • Rexall Remedies in Emporium only at ' our store.—The Rexall Store. The Emporium Drug Co. For Rent. One six room house, with bath, city . water, gas, cellar and all modern im provements. R. SEGER. t . l " ' ■ ■ ■ ■'■ ■ ■ ' ■■ ■ r Brushes s ! The best and most cotn ' plete line of Tooth Brushes, t Hair Brushes and Combs . ever seen in Emporium. j | ; | Tooth Brush.. JO to 40C ; f£ " rmhes 19c to $3 ■ : 10c to $1.25 ; Fine line of Barber Combs. ' \ Good line pocket combs, lather brushes and stroos at > 1 * - The Old Reliable Drug Store, GEO C. TAGGART. Prop. =================================== For the most Stylish Millinery See LUDLAMS i This Space Belongs to I Jasper Harris,! The People's Clothing House I Opposite Post Office, EMPORIUM, PA. |
Significant historical Pennsylvania newspapers