Cameron County press. (Emporium, Cameron County, Pa.) 1866-1922, July 21, 1910, Image 10

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    TWO-DAY EXCURSION
TO ff
AXilt RIiTrUN
AND RKTTON I
From Emporium Junction
Tuesday, July 26, 1310
Tickets good going only on trains leaving 6:150 A. M, or 8:45 A. M |
Goo i returning on all regular trains leaving Niagara rails and Buf- j
falo July 26 or 27. Baggage will not be checked on these tickets. jj
Tickets will not be accepted fur passage in Pullman Parlor or 112
Sleeping Cars. j
Children Hetween Five and Twelve Vcarsof Akc, Half Fare. g
J. R. WOOD, GEO. W. BOYD, j
Passenger Traffic; Manager. 650-22-21. General Passenger Agent.
ffj Jgks 1 ' In the Race to Win B
H8 y»we always have been and wj
Li A /7 y y7^e!ia V e succeeded in keep- H
fm ' ' N * l ~~' - -** i ng ]n tlie lead with men of B|
■ JV I </(•/'—critical tastes who would K
gS ' - - have well fitting, handsome H
M " fc -K^ aild stylish clothing at at- ■
§& ' 'J), Sjfess 'tractive prices. Our gar- B
9 j" 'a n w' " " ments always lead in style, nj
« •/ \ fit and finish, and when yon B
- : V j|\ Y&> have secured a suit of Jasper B
w vV\ Harris' clothing you know H
I! Home of Hart, Shaffner & Marx Clothes g
Jasper Harris,!
The People's Clothing House
\ 0 pposite Post Office, EMPORIUM, PA.
HARVESTING
IMPLEMENTS 1
FROM TlrfM BEvBT s— x
4^)
I
/y ' ft \ L
■ ( WWWwr^ K
WE KKRP Til?. LKADING MAKES OF HARVESTING
MACHINERY. DON'T PUT OFF HUMNG VOIR MACIIIN- j
CRY. FOR WHEN YOUR CROPS RIPEN THKY WON'T j
WAIT FOR YOU. I
WE HAVI. A FULL LINK OF HAY RAKES.HAY FORKS. j
SCY riIKS. SCYTHE SNA ICID S. SCYTHE STONES. HAY
ROPE, ALL Slit- S AND PULLEYS t OR SAME.
V* E CAN SUPPLY YOU WITH ALL THE REPAIRS NEC
ESSARY FOR THE FOLLOWING MACHINES: MC COR- I
MICK. DFERING. CHAMPION AND MILWAUKEE HAR- |
VESTING MACHINERY OF ALL KINDS.
ORDKK ALL REPAIRS EARLY SO YOU WILL HE SURE
AND HAVE THEM WHEN YOU WAN r THEM.
WE CARRY A COMPLETE LINE OF HARDWARE OF
ALL KINDS. ROOFING AND HUILDING PAPER
W D WILL APPRECIA I E YOUR BUSINESS W ID. I NI K
LARGE OR SMALL AND INVITE YOl/ AT ALL TIMES TO
LOOK OVER OUR S IDCK WW. I HER YOU BUY OR NO I.
The Most Complete Line of Hardware
Ntjvtir ha* our wi|»bli*hiii«Mit l**m Is-tii-r wide 112• > mrft tlx
tli*ut4»»klof llii* trade ltiuit at pre-i'iit. \\'«« the li»i > t and
Bi"d «M>lil|ilute lints of <•>'»•!•) tiii n« that »houUI U» found in ulu -t
--rl- llardwurti nlurn. Drop in mill *. .• u no fenrni (lour if
you do not iniri'hwtw.
F. V. MEILMAN & CO.
Sunt door lo liMtt, J. Ulkti » Furuitur. Mfc**.
CAMERON COUNTY PRESS, THURSDAY, JULY 21, rqio.
mmm-f. ucuncuasMfr.. tzmatix it >xm *9 r i.. -«
Respond to Blue Eyes.
"Every littlu while physiologists come
I) the front with some advantage ac-
I fruing to people who have blue eyes,"
j laid the city salesman. "Well, i dis
| covereil a point that they have never
I mentioned, A Jeweler told me. lie i*
] manager ot the jewelry department of
j a big store. 1 applied to him for a
situation for my wife's cousin.
"'What's the color of her eyes?' he
j asked.
| " 'Brown.' I said.
"'Bring her down ami I will take a
i look at her,' he said, 'but 1 am afraid
i she won't do. People with a certain
shade of blue eyes make the best jew
elrj salesmen. Many customers who
buy jewelry want some one to try it
; dii so they can get the effect of the
i nones when worn. There Is something
tbout deep blue eyes that brings out
' ihe best lights in most Jewels Take
; aotice and you will tin<l that two
thirds oi the jewelry salesmen In New
, York have blue eyes.'"—New York
limes.
Stingy Queen Bess.
Every one who ever aid anything
for Queen Bess seems to have been
left with a bad debt on his books. So
we find an unfortunate John Conley
writing to Sir Robert Cecil that for
the Inst two years he had been suitor
for £IOO for "beeves for the army" and
complaining that "unless some order
be taken I shall be undone." Sir Ed
ward Hastyngs. after spending his life
in serving the queen, had to pawn his
wife's jewels and beg her majesty "to
bestow something upon me in this my
latter age." So badly was the fleet
that beat the armada provisioned that
Francis Drake had to seize at Plym
outh ninety bags of rico. and the un
fortunate owner, after ten years'
waiting, was refused payment, "rice
being an extraordinary victual not al
lowed for the navy." Nor did common
soldiers fare better. The chief anxie
ty of all Elizabeth's ministers ought,
in her view, to have beeu how to save
most money.—London Telegraph.
Eating For the Love of It.
Pawlow has given epicureanism In
eating strong scientific support, and
many of Horace Fletcher's Ideas tind
orthodox justification. The first rule of
dietetic conduct, according to Fletcher,
is to eat only when one is hungry and
to eat only the things from which one
anticipates enjoyment. He also teaches
that one must eat In the way that
gives the greatest sensual pleasure
that is. by thorough chewing and tast
ing; also serenity of mind, pleasant
surroundings at a meal, congenial
friends, pleasurable conversation—in
fact, everything that adds to enjoyment
aids digestion. In other words, the
process of digestion furnishes a beauti
ful illustration of the influence of mind
u|m>ti matter. The inspiring stimulus
is not mechanical, but psychic. The
preliminary essential to the orderly as
similation of food is the keen desire
for it.—MeClure s Magazine.
A Paradoxical River.
On the African shore, near the gulf
ot Aden and connecting the lake of
Assal with the main ocean, may be
found one of the most wonderful riv
ers iu the world. This curiosity does
not. flow to but from the ocean toward
inland. The surface of Lake Assal
Itself is nearly 700 feet below the
mean tide, and It is fed by this para
doxical river, which is about twenty
two miles in length. It Is highly prol>-
nble that the whole basin which the
lagoon partly tills was once un arm
of the sea which became separated
therefrom by the dunlng of loose sand.
The inflowing river has a limited vol
ume, being fullest, of course, at high
tide, and has tilled the basin to such
an extent that evaporation and supply
exactly balance each other.
Hie Maternal G-andmo.
A devoted lather after a day's ab
sence was met by his two little sous.
"Have you been good boys¥"
Silence.
"Have you been good boys?"
"No. papa, I called grandma a bad
word," said tlveyear-old. turning scar
let.
"Is It |K>ss|lile? What did you chII
your grandma y
"I called her a human belns"
The father, with a mighty effort,
! maintained Ills gravity and closed the
s '••lie decorously. "I must fortlve ymi
I for ouce. but reineinlier If you ever call
jrour grandmother a human tn-ltig again
1 Khali have to spunk you."
Stated a Fact.
"I»o j'ou mw the tiorixon yonder
where the sky seems to meet tlu
i e.t rt h
"Yes. unci#."
"Hoy, I have Journeyed «i iienr there
| that I couldn't put a sixpence between
I my head and th sky '
i "Oh. untie, wliat a whopper!"
"It's a fuct, to) tail I hadn't one to
put"—Pearson's \\.-»klv
An Unnecessary System
"You oiiklil tu have it burglar alarm
system In your house." »ant the ele
trival supply agent, "so Unit >ou will
be ii\wt'..i|u«l |f a tuirglur raises one of
the ttindott* ~r opens a door at ulglii
"No burglar can gel In here while we
are peacefully sleeping " replied Mr
Newpop "We are weaning our lathy "
I'ltkugu Mih 00l ller iid
Netsble Kateptiene.
Mrs lUiMibumpt r Ye*. ever>l»"dy I*
alvtn)» ready tu give mlvh e
lti.-.t.mup. i There sr«- ■» eptiuna
"Are there*"'
"Y, s d»« tors and lawyers."
The leaoous of life are lost If (Hat it
Nul lutpreu U» wtlh lh«f uei-wsilll of
mskiun suipie allow null's for the iw
Goiny Round tho World.
In sallin; around the world enst
! ward the days are each a little less
j than twenty four hours, according to
j the speed of thu ship, as the sun is
met a little earlier every morning.
Tie so little differences added together
j will amount to twenty-four hours,
i This gives the sailors an extra day—
! not in imagination, but a* an actual
fact. They will have don • an cxtr.i
I day's work, eaten an extra day's ration
| of food and Imbibed tin extra day's nl
! lowance of grog.
On the other hand, in sailing west
! ward the sun is overtaken a little each
(lay, and so each day is rather longer
than twenty-four hours, and clocks
and watches are found to be too fast.
This also will amount in sailing around
the world lo the point of departure to
| one whole day by which the reckoning
has fallen in arrears. The eastern
I bound ship, thou, has gained a day.
' and the western bound ship has lost
! one. This strange fact, clearly work
! Ed out, leads to the apparent paradox
that the first named ship has a gain of
two whole days over the latter, if we
suppose them to have departed from
port and returned together,—Philadel
phia Record.
Modern Gold Mining.
Up until about 1850 only placer or
surface gold was mined- that is, free
gold, deposited in the beds of streams,
in sands and in the crevices of rocks.
Placer mining, mainly in new and re
mote regions, still furnishes a material
though not a large percentage of tlio
world's output. Formerly the alluvial
gold was separated from the sands
and gravels containing it by washing
them in pans, cradles, rockers and
sluices. In ISu2 the hydraulic method
was first employed iu California. By
this means a "giant" stream of water
turned against the side of a mountain
washes everything before it. The gold
settles to the bottom of tho tunnel or
sluice through which the gravel, sand
and water flow. In ISS9 dredges or
excavators were first used in Austra
lia. Today steam and electric dredges
produce a considerable portion of the
world's output.—Byron W. Holt in Ev
erybody's.
Why Boiled Water Freezes Easily.
Water which is hot of course cannot
freeze until it has parted with its heat,
but water that has been boiled will,
other things being equal, freeze sooner
than water which has not been boiled.
A slight disturbance of water disposes
it to freeze more rapidly, anil this is
the cause which accelerates tho freez
ing of boiled water. The water that
has been boiled has lost the air natu
rally contained iu it, which on ex
posure to the atmosphere it begins
again to attract and absorb. During
this process of absorption a motion is
necessarily produc&l among its parti
cles. slight certainly and impercepti
ble, yet probably sufficient to accel
erate Its congelation. In unboiled wa
ter this disturbance docs not exist.
Indeed, water when kept perfectly still
can be reduced several degrees below
the freezing point without Its becom
ing ice.
Gardens In the Ice.
A glacier when it dislodges itself and
sails away over the Arctic ocean never
travels alone. In the wake of every
large one floats a line of similar com
panions. The Eskimos call this phe
nomenon "the duck and ducklings."
and any one who has watched the
progress of the wild duck followed '>y
her brood will appreciate the aptitude
of the name. Strange as It may seem,
plants grow and blossom upon these
great Ice mountains. When a glacier
is at rest moss attaches Itself to It,
protecting the Ice beneath. Just as
sawdust does. After a time the moss
decays and forms a soil, iu which the
seeds of buttercups anil dandelions,
brought by the wind, take root and
flourish. Those who have traveled
much Iu arctic lands say the poppy
does not bloom during the brief north
ern summer.
A Bismarck Incident.
It used to be the privilege of Aus
tria's representative at any conference
of representatives of the German
states to smoke, tho others refraining
1 This was supi>osed to be un aeknowl
' ol 'iei tol Austria's «nprenincy At tae
I lirst conference that Itlsiuurek utteinl
i ed as Prussia's representative he be
I gnn to puff smoke across the confer
i nee table as soon as the Austrian dip
Inmiit Ml up. That set everybody pre-.
( elit to MiM klng uti equal terms, and
; Austria's supremacy got a blow.
A Tifely Wan-.i g.
"Your do.; seems a very Intelligent
l antnml." remarketl an iu«x|>erle&ced
| iporisniun '" u natoeke.
"Y'- sir." was the ready resitonse
"Wonderful nil* tligeiit 'e Is! Yes,
t'other ilay '• bit « guilt as only give
me a 'urf sovereign after » daj's
•hoot!"-- LOIHIOII Scraps.
Her Dear Friend,
Su»le— Now, « lieu I'm nskitl to sing
1 never say. "<>h. t can't!" I alw.i.v*
| sit ituwN ai the plain*— Jennie—And
let the audience (he! |t out for tlu-lil
selves?—llltixtrutcd lilts
The Fire! Step.
Y'-ung Woman itief'-ru milliner's
window, tu her nmMi t'tint bat Is iter
fi» tl lovely | ii.out have II M irle,
lie *ure tu remind me tu kUs my tin
band when I gel home.
Quickly Subdued.
V> n Hlui 'tr (i. ,irl , with rayn)
Who told y- u Iu pul paper >n the wall'
[Worstur \our wife. air. Yoa Hlu
I'lfil) . U(t I ||)
it* like *v»r'tbirtg In Hi* wt#rM
j « rtytit t| tv s*»•' * *I! «m*«u§ i
|H. S. IIOYD
I The First Requisite
janfftv in letter writing is that the paper
■* 'V Vf* t 112 used bo. above criticism.
;>!■ jh::4 As*. fag Your stationary should reflect
.-JjJ 112 your taste, character and refine
r' ment, and convev your personal
v - *•;.•* v'
rj ! i . The Eaton, Crane Pike Writing
Paper tare always the first choice
!■. ' Kjf °** discriminating people. They
si are by far the finest social eorrcs-
J - *'■ ' »• • I j 1
y" (' I pondence papers made. They
! ,S5rX. . •'/ are lirst in quality, and absolutely
correct in style. Thsir artistic
and painty boxing adds uch to
th r general attractiveneeg.
Oorna in and let us show you our line of the ji ttly popular EATON
CRANE & PIKE papers.
H. S. LLOYD, Masonic Block
OUR
JF? STYLE SHOW IS ON |
Alfred Benjamin & Co^s
Ncav Vorlt Styles
rZM Correct Clothes for Men
Young Men for the
/ ®P Season of 1910
.Suits and Overcoats 22
1 a \ Roys and Children's $9 (n
I. \ I Suits from 10
|| Full line of Furnishings,
HP / Hats, Caps and
11 DOUGLAS SHOES.
Clothes R. SEGER &CG
Jjl/rid Bcnj.,vn.G>r. A |i
EMPORIUM, I*A.
Millinery
I' To close out our sea
son's goods we have re
duced the price from 1-3
to 1-2 on all Trimmed
Hats. 26 per cent, on all
Untrimmed Hats and
Flowers. We carry noth
ing over from one season P
to another. Everything
must go regardless of cost
LUDLAMS