only baking from Royal Grape Cream of Tariar flg||g| Makes Finest, Purest FOO<M| LOCAL UKPAttTMIvST, PERSONAL UOSSIP. Contributions tnviUd. /nut irhtch you woulo *ikc to see in thia department,le f »• t now by pos fd! card, 'etter or personal'y. Miss Niokolas, of Renovo, spent Thanksgiving with her sister. Mrs. H. fi- Marshall. Miss Wilson, of Port Allegany visit ed F. B. Fitch and family of Spring street, Monday. Mr. and Mrs. W. H. Lupoid visited Sionamahoning several days last week, guests of Mr. Lupold's parents. H. M. Olmsted, of Ridgway, was Jt at the home of his father, H. C. asted and family, last .Sunday, unes Welsh and wife, of Port Alle , Were guests at the home of C. O. and family, the last of the week. Mt and Mrs. Jasper Harris spent Wednesday of this week transacting business at BuffafFo. Fred S. Keim, of this place, is enjoy ing a short vacation visiting friends at St. Marys and Dußois. Joe Marshall, of Sterling Run, trans acted business at Emporium last Mon day and called at the PRESS office. George E. Fetter, who is attending school at Pittsburg, came home to spend Thanksgiving with his mother. Mrs. Walter Slingerland, of Elmira, N. Y., is guest at the home of William Knickerbocker and family, on Cherry street j Mrs. Charles Maloy, of thia place, called at the new PRESS office last Friday afternoon and renewed her sub scription. LL W. Graham, the Broad street ton sorial artiat, was one of the first callers at the new PRES.i office and renewed his subscription for another year. Leon E. Larrabee and wife, of Brad ford, were business callers at this place Monday and also called on rela tives. Messrs. Ermine Rentz and Richard Hughes, of this place, went to Buffalo, Jast Thursday morning and returned home on Friday evening. Sirs. Gertrude Peters and Mrs. A. J. j fngersoll, of Whittemore Hill, were j PRESS callers on Tuesday and looked over our new plant. Misses Viola, Evelyn and Leona Gerg returned to their home at this j place last Monday morning, aiter | spending several days with relatives ! at St. Marys. Miss Made Callahan, of Driftwood, was guest at the home of Peter Sclnvei kart and family the last of the week. Miss Callahan attended the dance on Wednesday evening. Mrs. M. Garvin and daughter, Miss Florence, aud son Earl, departed on Monday afternoon for their home at Custer Neb., having spent the past three months, guests at the home of the former's sister, Mrs. J. R. Fetter. A communication from a former townsman, Mr. John Gubbins, informs the PRESS that he has been compelled to close out his shop at Delevan, N. Y., on accoent of ill health and has pur chased a farm near Arcade, where he will have out-door work. Jackson Ingersoll, son of Mr. and Mrs. A. J. Ingersoll, of More Hill, has been confined to his bed, at the resi dence of Mr. and Mrs. A. E. Gross, for five weeks. He is passing through a siege of typhoid fever and by the aid of a good constitution, Dr. Bush's watchful attention and the faithful nursing by his mother, he is pulling safely out of danger. Messrs. Herkie Jones and Dorr Spencer will depart next Wednesday, Dec. 8, for Indiana, where they will enter Valpraiso University. They will take up music and other special studies with a full commercial course. They expect to be gone nine months or a year. All wish them success. Geo. C. Goodwin, of Buffalo, N. Y., formerly a resident of Emporium, writes us relative to the death of his cousin, lahi Lloyd Cravin, Nov. 22d. Mr. Goodwin is foreman ot Barcola *leat and Light Co. See death's »ings. Miss Mabel Hilliard will entertain next Saturday evening, Dec. 4th, in honor of Messrs. Herkie Jones and Dorr Spencer who will leave for school. Messrss Will Schweikart, Lloyd Bissell and Arthur Catlin called on friends at Driftwood, last Sunday afternoon. Driftwood holds some great attractions for Emporium young men. Mesdames Andrew Kaul, Br., Thoe. Hannhauser, Charles Lions, Sr., and Andrew Geek, autoed down from St. Marys on Monday to spend the day with their friend and relative, Mrs. H. 0. Kenly aud family on Shives' farm. The ladles report a delightful visit. E. W. Yeagle and wife, of St. Marys, are guests at the home of Mrs. M. A. Rockwell. Mr. Yeagle is conducting the Emporium Drug Company's store daring the absence of Mr. Keim. Mrs. B. B. Throop, of Williamsport, accamponied by ;her little son, are visiting the former's parents, Hon. and Mrs. I. K. Hockley. Edwin Floyd, of Olean, is visiting and transacting business in Bmpori am. W. Clyde Sykes, af Bugalo, isjspend ing the week guest' at the Walker home on Fourth street. A DOCTOR'S S PRESCRIPTION FOR: 1 PIMPLES " To remove Pimples, Blackheads, Blotches, and all forms of skin erup tions, is, according to a well known physician, a very easy matter; he says that many are afflicted with some one of the above ailments, and are subject to a great deal of embarrassment on account of the unsightly appearance which they present, and recommends the following simple, harmless and in expensive treatment. Goto your druggist and get this prescription fill ed: Clearola one-half ounce, Ether one ounce, Alcohol sev'en ounces, mix, shake well and apply 'to the parts af fected night and morning, allowing it to remain on the skin at least ten minutes, then wipe off the powder from the skin. Use a soft cloth or sponge in applying the mixture and in from ten days to two weeks your face will be smooth and clear as a marriage bell. Get the Pure Clearola, which is only put up in one-half ounce packages. Ask to see it. WANTED At once Men to represent us, either loeS|ly or traveling. Now is the time to start. Money in the work for the right men. Apply at once and secure terri tory. ALLEN NURSEY CO., ROCHESTER, N. Y 33-3 m. Charier Notice. N" Tlf ' K hereby given that an application * w ill be made to the Governor of the State of Pennsylvania, on Monday, December '2oth. I'JtiO, by George P. Jones, Lyman Wiley ami C. W. Kishell, under the Act of Assembly of the Com monwealth of Pennsylvania, entitled, "An Act to provide for the incorporation and regulation of certain corporations,'* approved April 29th, I*7l, and the supplements thereto, lor the char ter of an intended corporation to be called. "CAM ERON POWDER MA N UK.YCTU UIN( i COMPANY," the character and object of which is the manufacture and sale of explosives and the apparatus and materials for exploding the same and for tlipse purposes to have, pi ssess and enjoy all the rights, benefits and privileges of the said Act of Assembly and its supplements. JOHNSON A: MrNARNEY. 41-31, Solicitors NOTICE TO THE STOCKHOLDERS OF THE EMPORIUM POWDER MANUFAC TURING COMPANY. VTOTICE is hereby given that there will be a meeting of the stockholders of the Empor ium Powder Manufacturing Company at the of fice of the Baid Company, at Emporium, I'a., on Wednesday, the 15th day of December, A. D„ 1909, between the hours of two o'clock and tour o'clock in the afternoon of the said day, for the purpose of altering and amending the by laws of the said Company, at which time and place there will be submitted to the meeting for the rejection or approval, to be determined by a vote of its stockholders holding a majority in in terest of all its stock, the following amendment: To amend Article 11, Section I, so the same shall read as follows: Article 11, Section I. The regular meeting of the stockholders and the election of a Board of Thirteen Directors shall be held at the office of the said Company, in Emporium, Pa., on the 3rd Tuesday in January of each year, between the hours of two and four o'clock in the afternoon of the said day. Notice of such meeting to be pubtished in two of the newspapers' of Emporium, Pa., and a copy of said notice to bi? mailed to all stockholders at their last known address, at least two weeks be fore tbe proposed miieting. FRANK SHIVES, _ President. Emporium, Pa., November 30th, 1909. CAMERON COUNTY PRESS, THURSDAY, DECEMBER 2, r 9 0 9 . Knew It Was a Canal. ROIIIP of those youngsters who are studying physiology have as hard a time as their parents figuring out the terms used in that profoundly interest ing subject. One little girl, according to her mentor, was asked the other day to name the three openings Into the thror.t. For the henetlt of the gen tle reader who in ay not have studied his physiology recently it may be stat ed thj'.l the openings are the epiglottis, the esophagus and the alimentary ca nal. The little jrlrl had tried awfully hard to remember these names because she had a bunch that the teacher would ask her to give them. She started bravely. "The epiglottis," she began and hesi tated "liifcht you are," encouraged the fancher. "What then?" "The —uni —sih -sarcophagus?" she In qulred a little dubiously. "You mean esophagus, my dear." suggested the teacher. "And the third ?" "The Erie canal!" announced the lit tre girl conildentiy and triumphantly.— Louisville Courier-Journal. The Bucket Shop. "Bucket shops"—a name now used to denote small "outside" stockbrokers or financiers not In membership with the Btock Kxchange—were so called because wheu they first started in Chicago the only commodity dealt ia by small speculators to any extent was wheat. The legitimate dealers would not handle an order for less than 5.000 bushels, and then a lot of places sprung up where men of lim ited capital could speculate with very small sums, and these men were spo ken of contemptuously as buying and selling -'heat by the bucketful; hence shopp ivhere a small business was com .icted in grain on a margin came to be known as bucket shops. The term was finally extended to cover all brokerage offices where small lots of either grain or stock were bought and sold, and it was applied particularly to those places where both seller and buyer did not more than "gamble" on the rise and fall of stocks. en Men's Hats. Why la it that a man's hat has a band, and why is it this baud bus a bow invariably on the left side? The answer is that there was a time when a piece of cloth adjusted to the head and tiitd with a band of other materiul served fo»- a headpiece. The reason the how was always placed on the left side had its origin in the fact thut in wielding a sword—an ac complishment possessed by nearly ev ery one of consequence at one period of the world's history—the bow or rosette if placed on the right side would have been in the way. Its pres ent duy utility is that it keeps most men from wearing their hats bind side before, and. although with most hats that would not matter, with most heads it does.—Chicago Kecord-lleruld. On the Moon. The question "Could a man live on the moon?" lias been put to an emi nent astronomer, who replied: "1 am afraid not. A man transplanted to the moon would find himself the lone in habitant of a perfectly lifeless orb in which eternal silence reigns. lie would have to manage without air, water or fire. He would not need to put windows in his house, for there is no wind, no rain, 110 dust, upon the 1110011. It has been truly and practical ly observed that the moon is apparent ly abandoned to death, nourishing uo inhabitants, producing nothing resem bling trees, flowers or beautiful things of any kind—useless, in short, except as a mass of extinct volcanic rubbish, which drags the sea into tides and re flects the sunbeams in moonlight." The Dean's Retort. One Sunday morning at Caunton church Dean Hole noticed a tipsy man in the congregation. He bore his pres ence until it was no louger possible and then cauie to a halt with the question, "Are you fit to remain in God's house?" The man got up unsteadily and was helped to the door. "James," said Hole after the service was over, "what did you do with him?" The useful parishioner replied, "I put him 011 a tombstone, sir." The indignant vicar's retort was, "Couldn't you have put him under it?" —London Mail. Names In Politics. "I want to make a name for myself in politics," said the ambitious youth. "Well," answered Senator Sorghum, "it's liable-to be a long and difficult enterprise. You'll probably have to putin a considerable share of your time allowing your enemies to call yau any names they happen to think of."—Washington Star. His Clarm to Fame. "Who was this fellow Pepys. and what is his claim to fame?" "Ills claim to fame is well founded, my friend. He's the man who kept a diary for more than a year.'—Kansas City Journal. Cause For Surprise. Belle—Mr. Illggins started to kiss me, last night. Beulah —And weren't you surprised? "I should say 1 was. He didn't do It."—Yonkers Statesman. His Preparation. "Listen to this charming bit of obit uary sentiment," said a cynical bach elor: "He had been married forty years and was prepared to die." Ladles' Home Journal. We accomplish more by prudence than by force.—Tacitus. Wanted. A girl, or woman, to do general house work. Will pay good wages. Address all communications to X Y. Z ., care ol PRESS office, Emporium, Pa- Business Carets. J. C. JOUNSON. J. I>. MCNAUNHV F. A. JOHNSON. JOHNSON & McNARNLY, ATTORN EYB-AT-LA W EMPORII,M, PA. Will give prompt attention to -ill business t usted to them. 16-ly. MICHAEL iIIIENNAN, ATTORNKY-AT-LAVV Collections promptly attended to. lteal estate and pension claim agent, 35-ly. Emporium.Pa. H. W. OREKN. JAY P. V LT OHEEN & FELT, VfTORNEYS-AT-LAW, Corner Fourth and Broad streets, Emporium, Pa. All business relatingto estate,collections.real estate. Orphan's Court and generallaw business will receive prompt attention. 41-25-ly. MAY GOULD, PIANO, HARMONY AND THEORY Also dealer In all the Popular ->heet Music, Emporium, Pa. Scholars taught either at ray home on Sixth street or at the homesofthe pupils. Outoftowa scholars will be given dates at my room -in tht< place. Santa i n the Stable In short for Holiday fare for yonr horse if his grain and feed have been bought from as. At all times watch ftil of the interests of yourself and yonr dumb friends and servitors,we bespeak liberal purchases of hay, oats, corn and other grains and feed this Holiday time. Open yonr heart and your pocketbook for a Christmas treat for Mr Equine. I 'RICE LIST. Emporium, Pa., Nov. 24, 1909. NEMOPIHLA, per sack (1 60 Felt's Fancy, " J 65 Pet Grove. " 1 65 Roller Meal " 50 Rye " 75 Graham " 80 Buckwheat, " 80 Buckwheat, 10 lb sack, 35 Coarse Meal per 100, 1 50 Chop Feed, " 1 50 Cracked Corn per 100 1 50 Middlings " 1 50 White Middlings, 1 60 Bran 1 50 Chicken Wheat " 2 00 Screenings " 1 50 Oil Meal " 2 00 Corn per bushel 84 Daisy Dairy Molasses Feed 1 50 Sterling Scratch Feed 2 00 Alfalfa Meal 1 50 Whit fOais. per bushel 53 Oyst r Shells, per 100 75 Choii eClovtr Seed, ) OhoiceTimothySeed, > At Market Priced Choice Millet Seed, \ Our New Peroxide Toilet Cream is superfine—not greasy— Cleanses, Softens and Whitens the skin and is a grand fle9h food R. C. Dodson Pharmacist coj-vib- -*vr ■ 'wm*: ■ r*»<*/•" .'^rmrt/iavnviHHanDt nAiiiuiUliHjj TS T 7 ! )TTTWT ; WWWWPaauaßßtiaßaßMaaeraaaaaaattoßMi craua Coughs, Colds, CROUP, Whooping Cough Tbls rtmtdy un always be depended upon and ' Is pleasant to take. It contains no opium or i other harmful drug and may be given as confl- | dentfy ta a baby as to an adult Price 25 cents, large size 50 cents. r* —— iMipiupjpE wnr.i yf| Busy Preparing for the Holiday Service • HOUSE JV * T/J * Furnishing J y /L\ CROCKERY ~ Specialises GLASS I» e Satisfactory Store • ■ GALORE POTTERY A fi I an °vegetables | I You can depend upon this store for fine liners of I Q foods as well as for widest variety and fairest prices. I A Just now special attention is being given to goods for I I the holiday season. | Special this Week for Friday and Saturday J t Sugar—2slb Bag best granulated Sugar, $1.45 II jf 6]/z lbs Best Rolled Oats for 25c. fj Three cans best Standard Tomatoes 25c ■ xoc pkge selected Bird Seed Bc. P Six 5c packages Pearline for 25c. A Best obtainable Walnuts a lb 20c. •| 4 oc Florida Oranges, fairly sweet and juicy, doz 35c I 12 y z c Santa Clara Prunes, the large meaty nca lb. H ! 3 lbs Ontario Baking Co., Pretzeletts 25c. # m I Fresh Caught Lake Fish u,V.\™o"Vo«"A I BALTIMORE SHUCKED OYSTERS. I FREE DELIVERY to all parts of Town T Twice Each Day I You Get Better Values Here. J. H. DAY, I Emporiun^^® RESOLVED ! _/1 itoo CAM TELEPHONE FOP. UFJ II fjl 0 <flT ' GROCERIES OR DRUGS-BUT HLLUYL! I You GET CLOTHES YOO It . FLUST GO AND JELECT- FOR P* A FIRST CLASS PLACE HAS/ 1 "SFF R. /JFT ; A VARL ETYOF STYLES ANFTMGR PATTERNS THAT YOU MUST ' SEE To APPRECIATE • R BROW "PHOHF ax-rnt.uiT.a Mi. THE REAJoN WHY YOU MU.ST Go TO THE ■ «STORE AND PICK OUT AND TRY ONYOUR ! , AND CLOAK 1-5: Yol/ Do NOT 51/Y THEM AS OFTEN AS Yo \J DO6ROCERIE.S AND THEN Yol/ USUALLY 6ET SOMETHING DIP- ; FERENT FROM WHAT YoU HAD BEFORE. IF ! YOU HAVE NEVER BEEN INTO OUR -STORE, j HAVE YOU NOT DONE YOURSELF AN INJUS TICE BY NOT COMING IN AND SEEING WHAT WE CAN DOFOR YOU-HOW WELL WE CAN FIT BOTH YOUR EYES, YOUR FORM AND YOUR : PURSE. IF YOUR PURSE IS LEAN WE CAN GIVE YOU A SUIT FOR $9.98; A COAT FOR $10.50. IF YOUR PURSE IS FAT WE CAN GIVE YOU A COAT FOR $2 5 AND A SUIT FOR $3 5. TRIMMED HATS SPECIAL ON FUIDAY AND SATURDAY MRS. E. S. COPPERSMITH.
Significant historical Pennsylvania newspapers