Worth A Dollar A Drop. Fred Patehen, Manlius, N Y., writes: I —"For a long time I was affected with 1 kidney trouble which caused an almost constant pain in my back and inffamation in my bladder. Other remedies did* not even relieve me,[but two fifty cent bottles of Foley's Kidney Remedy completely cured me and I have not had any sym ptoms of kidney trouble for over two years." Sold by all druggists. Coughs That Hang On. Coughs that start in the fall and hang on until spring are sure trouble breeders unless checked and cured. Bronchitis, pneumonia ami consumption are the dir ect result. Foley's Honey and Tar cures the coup.h, stops the hard breathing and heals and soothes the inflamed air pass ages. Refuse substitutes. Sold by all j druggists. A Night Alarm. Worse than an alarm of fire at night is | the metallic cough of croup bringing j dread to the household. Careful mothers j keep Foley's Honey and Tar in the house j and give it at the first sigh or danger. Foley's Honey and Tar has saved many little lives and is the only safe prepara tion for children as it contains no opiates LADY WANTED! To introduce our large 1909 Spring line of beauti ful dress poods and waistings. Latest up-to-date New York City patterns. Handsomest line of materials ever seen. Quick sales, large profits. Can make S2O or more weekly. Hamplesand full instructions packed in neat sample case shipped Kxpress prepaid. No money required. E*clu sive territory. Our prices are low. Write for particulars. Be first to apply. Standard Dress Goods Co., Dept. 6, Blnghantlon, N. Y Triennial Tax Appeals. NOTICE is hereby given that the Commis sioners of Cameron Coun.y, will hear ap peals from the Triennial Assessments, and valua tions, of property ia said County, for the pur pose of taxation as follows: Lumber Township, Alpine House, Sterling Run, April 4th, 1910. Gibson Township, Commercial Hotel, Drift wood, April sth, 1910. Driftwood Borough, Commercial Hotel, Drift wood, April 6th, 1910. Orove Township, Enterprise House, Sinnama honing, April 7, 1910. Shippen Township, Court House. Emporium, April Bth and 9th, 1910. Emporium Borough, Court House, Emporium, April 11th, 12th and 13th, 1910. J. W. LEWIB. S. P. KREIDER, GEO. MINARD, ATTEST: Commissioners. W. L. THOMAS, Comm'rs Clerk, Emporium, Pa., March Ist., 1910. n3.4t. Will Pay Large Dividends. Land investments are secure and pay the best Land is Indestructible. Land values increase up on the average. Peopleof small means cannot as a rule, buy or sell land at great advantage. The greatest profits are made by acting together as a company. To buy acres at wholesale price and then to plat same into town or city lots, is the way to make money. A great factor in the degree of success of scheme is to have a strong company, run by experienced townsite men, build up the town or city and colonise all around it. Such a concern is the Interstate and Land Company, P. O. Box 293, Denver, Colorado. You will get big dividends by buying shares at one dollar each. Send your money at once to the above address, by post office or express order or by bank draft, for as maoy shares as you want. 3-4t. NOTICE OF APPLICATION FOR A CHARTER. is hereby given that application will he made by Josiuh Howard, Henry Auchu and Joseph ICaye, to the Governor of Pennsyl vania, on Friday, the 2."> th day of March. 1910, at ten o'clock, A. M., under the provisions of an act of Assemblv, entitled, "An act to provide for the incoiporation and regulation of certain cor porations", approved April 29th, A. I)., 1871, and the supplements thereto, for a charter for an in tended corporation, to he called KEYSTONE NATIONAL POWDKR COMPANY, the charac ter and object of which is manufacturing and sale of Nitroglycerine, Dynamite. Gelatine, Gun Powder, Blasting Powder, Chemicals and other supplies, compound and explosives of like na ture and the apparatus and materials lor i xplod ing the same, and for these purposes to liive. possess and enjoy all the rights, benefits and privileges by said act of Assembly and the sup plements thereto confirmed. IS. W. GREEN, JAY P. FELT. March 1, 1910,-nU-lt. Soli( itors. I C A N c E: R To prove to the world that i have the only (successful remedy for cancer, 1 will send, all charges prepaid, a sample bott !o to any sufferer. Address GEO. HOY TIBBINS, M. D., SPECIALIST, Wn.KESBARRE, PA., U. 8. A. Our guarantee is your protection— THE RED ( ROSS DRUG CO. 3 | RING VACATION EXCURSION Friday, March 25, 1910 \ F rom Emporium ■ s '°P" o¥er at Balti?nore& Piiiladdphja j ~T\" -,"IV J* ,l v 11 jS j I —' °* < ' V( n <.v >~ »n c ln(hn" dale of <;\ciir«i:ui. jj Easter Sunday at the National Capital SIMILAR EXCURSION APRIL S. I 1 iiifornuiltoji rijiartliiiE leuvhiK time or train may be obtained oi Ticket Agent' ■)'. 11. WOplK GEO. W. BOYD, 112 | P*" >'.• • r T"*.' /• Y. : i"cr l:;.:-/- it OetferM Pa>sr«ii;. r Aoriii. I l_ j Sedan and Bath Chairs. The sedan chair, so called from hav ing been made at Sedan, in France, was introduced into England In the time of King Charles 1. Often this chair wag most ornate without and luxurious within, for an ancieut poet speaks of one— • • • Covered with velvet red. And cloth of flne gold about your head. With damask white and azure blue Well diapered with lilies new. Seated In their sedan chairs in all the glory of paint, powder and patches, the belles and ladles of fashion of the eighteenth century were carried from rout to rout by two stout lackeys in livery. As all people who love their Dickens are aware, these chairs were still in use in the days of the Pickwick club. The origin of the bath chair is "wropt In mystery." We are told that it was "much used by the inhab itants of Bath," probably for the pur pose of getting to and from the pump room. Nowadays the use of the bath chair is confined chiefly to invalids.— London Mail. An English Election. Remarks the London Chronicle: "The worst of election expenses is that the candidate can never be sure what sort of pig in a poke he is buying. The parliament may run its full term or it may come to an end after a few months. Even if it lasts the game may be decidedly not worth the can dle. Sir Mountstuart Grant Duff gives a poignant little incident of the weari some struggle over the coercion bill in 1881. 'When things were at their dullest and deadliest Stuart Itendel heard a man as he rolled off his seat in the extremity of weariness say. "And to think that I should have paid £7,000 for this!" ' " Her Proof. "Just think of it! One person in every thirty-seven in England is a pauper." "Why. John," she returned, "it isn't so. 1 met more than thirty-seven peo ple in Loudon last summer myself, and there wasn't a pauper in the lot." —London Tit-Bits. He Was Right. "My doctor told uic I would have to quit eating so much meat." "Did you laugh him to scornV" "I did at first. But when he sent in his bill I found he was right."—Wash ington Star. His Style. Tom (who takes his meals at a ho tel)—Do you like your meals served table d'hote? Dick (who patronizes a street waffle wagon)— No. I generally take mine a la cart.—Baltimore Ameri can. Ambition is but avarice on stilts and masked.—Landor. Fully nine out of every ten cases of rheumatism is simply rheumatism of the muscles due to cold or damp, or chronic rheumatism, neither of which require any internal treatment. All that is needed to afford relief is the free application of Chamberlain's Liniment. Give it a trial. You are certain to be pleased with the quick relief which it affords. Sold by all druggists. Foley's Kidney Remedy is a safe and certain remedy for till kidney and blad der diseases, whether acute or chronic. It is splendid tonic for middle aged and elderly people and a sure curt: lor all an noyances and irregularities of the kidneys and bladder. Sold by all druggies. Medicines that aid nature are always the most successful. Chamberlain's Cough Remedy acts on this plan. It loosens the cough, relieves the lungs, opens the secretions and aids nature in re storing the system to a healthy condition. Sold by all druggists. Are you frequently hoarse? Do you have that annoying tickling in your throat? Does your cough annoy you at night, and do you raise niucuous in the mornin-i? Do you want relief? If so, take take Chamberlain's Cough Remedy and you will be pleased. Sold by all deal ers. CAMERON COUNTY PRESS, THURSDAY, MARCH io, tgio. THE GIANTS CAUSEWAY. formation and Appearance of This Odd Freak of Nature. The Giant's causeway is situated nt fbo northern extremity of County An trim, a short distance from Port Rush, Ireland. It consists of countless hosts of basaltic pillars, varying iu shape from a pentagon to an octagon, the av erage length of each column or pillar being about eighty feet, the whole stacked so closely together that a knife blade could hardly be inserted between them. Hut the forui(itiou of these pll lars is not the least wonderful part about tiiein. for. although they may be counted by thousands and tens of ''lousauds. each column is fashioned with a symmetry that suggests a ma son's handiwork. Their composition is a perfect fusion of one-half flinty earth. one-<|iiarter lime and clay, one quarter almost pure iron, each pillar being divided into regular lengths or joints which come together as a per fect natural ball and socket union. Although to be found In small de tachments (Imbedded iu the cliffs, sands, etc.i for some distance along the shore, the principal aggregations forming the causeway proper consist of three projections or tongues known as little, middle and grand causeways. These singular columns are of differ ent lengths and present an astonishing appearance as they stand, an army of at least -K).(KH) strong marshaled on the shores of Klin as if ever ready to do battle with the rising tide. THE COVETtD PLANT. Just a Bit of Human Nature In a Florist's Shop. Two little girls entered a florist's shop. So near each other in size were they that they would have been taken for twins. They had 2(1 cents—locents apiece—and with this stun saved from pennies for some time hack they were going to buy a plant for mamma. One stepped out a little in advance of the other when the door closed behind them. The other was shy. looking timidly, but confidently, at her sister The woman iu charge of the small shop looked up as the two mites of humanity paused in front of her. "Well?" she said encouragingly. "We want to buy a plant." said the little spokeswoman. Then she added, in order to avoid later embarrassment. "The i Lieu pest one you've got." "Ah." said Ihe florist, going to the window, "here is a nice little plant for 28» cents." The little sister turned quickly to the other, but still smiling bravely. "Baby, we've just missed it a nick el," she said. Yet not three minutes later they is sued from the shop bearing the plant between them, and as the woman de posited the two silver dintes iu the cash drawer her eyes uiust have caught their gleam, for there was something shining there.—New York Times Fras.k Stockton and Poetry. Frank Stockton never could write a successful poem. In this connection the novelist frequently told a good story on himself. In his youth in con junction with his brother John he wrote many poems, with which he af flicted the editors of various Canadian periodicals. The effusions always came back. The editor of one maga zine \va:; an especial target of lite Stocktons, but a.-: none of their poems was over sic■ . pted the brothers came to the conclusion that the editor had no conception if good poetry. To prove their belief they hunted up and di .patched to him an ode, little known, by Milton. Within tv.o days they re ceived a check and a letter of thanks "I came to tli:? conclusion (hat that editor know poetry when lie saw ii aficr all." Air Sto.-kion used to snly I'm h : -sited villi 'ov.- ; for jO.l ,\l< s "y'>iuii!;s - Oh, I see! i And ,v:ii wsi!" t tr the j.oll tire?— | 01 ilea; o No •. THE AMERICAN ACCENT. An English Writer Frees His Mind on the Subject. "Tl"» Amerletiii sicceut." writes a conteinporai correspondent. "is fsir less Irritsiting than the ooekue.\ disi lect. and It would be well for us if tile former, which is at least musical, could be substituted for the cacopho nous patois of our east end." As a matter of fact, we think that the cockney accent lists a certain num her of restl admirers, but what we wish to call to our readers' minds par tietil irly Is 1 hut America has its cock lie.\. so lo spesik, precisely as we have People iti Kentucky hstve a rstthei bu. t lsh wa.i of speaklnu. and iliey l<-,i|i<» and detest the fruity twang \\ nt b overwhelms New l-higlaud The w«*>u«rner. stgain. is responsible fot the disslfct which was supplied on th«* English bosirds by stage Yankees. Whether you si dpi ire the Amerlciiti accent or not depends on the length <>f time you remain in America English men who stay iu New York for pro tracted periods preserve their native cadences intact. It is the man who pays a Hying visit to the United Stsites who comes back and always says; "nop" for "no" and "yep" for "yes." Once we met si insm who had re turned from a week's stay in Boston lie said he had heard it was easy to acquire the twang and finally exclaim ed. "Waal, stranger. I guess it may be dead easy for some, but not for Blank Z. Asterisk." meaning himself. "Now, what's your opinion? Am I right?"— London Globe. THE VORACIOUS TUNAS. What Happens When They Meet a School of Flyir.g Fish. One time sit Ssui (Jleinente we sight ed si feeding school of tuna, an exhil arating sight. A flying fish weighing a pound and a half or more would start from the water and soar an ex traordinary distance, nearly out ot sight, but every inch of that flight l knew was covered by a big tuusi keep ing his place just beneath the flier and ready to seize it the moment it fell into the water. This rarely failed The moment the fish began to drop the tuna would spring at it like si tiger, turning and tossing the spume into the air with a splendid sind elec trifying rush, si maneuver that was repeated sill over the blue channel. The sensational charge meant that a school of tunas bad discovered a school of its natural prey, flying flsbes. At once the lust for blood and food was on, and carnage wsis the result. I have observed some curious scenes at sea. but never have 1 seen fear so forcibly expressed sis by a school of flying fishes, exhausted and at the mercy of the voracious tunas. I have had them gsither sibout my bosit and cling to its keel as closely as they could, while the air was full of leap ing tunas and soaring tish. At such times when a school of sardines is rounded up the fishes are so terrified that men have rowed up to them and scooped them iu by the pailful.—Out ing. Curious Optical Properties. Asterism is the beautiful name given to a curious optical property of cer tain minersils. They show a star j shaped figure where light is reflect* t! from tlieui or transmitted throug'i them. This is seen iu the star stone which is si sort of sapphire, and i: the star ruby. T'.iere is asterism si Is < in mi'-a. 'I he pi.otogrstph of a lamp llanie taken thrt e-. ii a plate of niio;. shows st six rayed star, with six faint or rsidist! iotis between. Outwardly star mica t\ emblcs the ordinary form snul sh< ws the same phenomena limit r po)siri:'.cd II?.-ht. When examined 1111 der the mi ros ope. however, the sun isiiesi is fount! to contain line needle of another i: oral And these are regularly arranged at singles of 111 > degrees. To the - needles is due the star seen by transmitted light.—Cliica go Tribune. The Butchr.- Eird's l-P.rd'-:. It is possible thai the butcher bird's "curious and cruel habit" of Imps lie; various civr.tures upon hedge thorn his way of supporting his wife dune her period of seelusli n. Of many ;-i>e cies the female is fed by the male on the nest. Lan the butcher bird's prey consi !•: 1 ften e.f creatures which :::•■■ I too iarw to be eafen at a mouthful | f'ven i!' t'e male coull always dra i these carcasses to the nest il is obvi ous that the female could net cat them there, so ti: "larder" may have beet hit upon a . hs ppy device to get over the dlllicall . t!:female tlitting t!:!11• er to help herself whenever she is hui gry.- Coin try Life w!.:n Olianca For l-ler. A missionary wh■> was inaUhig hi • way ilireugh a backwoods region came npoxi an old woman sitting outside cabin. lie caiored upon :i relit ; talk ant] finally sis' ed her if she ilh.j j know there was a day of .;j: ••. corns--. | "No, i: 1 v fri- .' -vi. day.' v.l r.v.o, v ] "V','e!l. thein:' .-'.lie mused. ree':on I • . 11 grt to . 112 r v <• 'p o' ' i .. .eil c 11 Cip toms. "il'K lip I ' you :o do Koni-'-i :. . i . - as'X'iatlon.' "I'm fordt. I'll make my daughie " (•r I ' avo .vour sou a n tuie and un i omploypHVi!. Sii-v.'Msoi! ! / - ! Watch for Our Spring Announcement RESPECTFULLY, MRS. E. S. COPPERSMITH. Millinery j ' fU I I I lira A Me K: 3$ akS •« ffl a f/yt'A B'm a, ® | i BiffliiiwiiiwiHi'iiiiiiir'i iiMi'iflF, w-> If you have anything- So be printed "bring it to this office.