M« Worried the Judge. A story was recently told of the elder J Judge Peekhaiu, father of the supreme court justice. In the early days of dentistry a hickory plug was put Into the cavity to fill the space where a tooth ought to be. This plug had to be gently pounded Into Its desired po sition. The old Judge was somewhat addicted to strong language, and when the dentist began his wor kthe Judge Indulged in some classic comment. As the tapping of the plug continued he threw all dignity to the four winds of heaven, and his language became de- ; cidedly "more forcible than elegant." j When, however, he arose from the j chair after what seemed to hitn an interminable period of agony he pulled out all the stops In Ills vocabulary for a grand climax. The impression on his listener seems to have been deep and lasting. As the judge passed out the dentist grimly remarked to a wait ing patient: "Wasn't it beautiful? It wasn't real- j ]y necessary to pound half so long, but I did so enjoy his inflection that 1 almost pounded the hickory plug into | splinters. Wonderful command of \ language the judge has!"— Case and j Comment. Crossed by the Corpse. Most of Walthamstow is too modern to have much mystery about it, but the Walthamstow strip" of Leyton preserves the memory of a curious old 1 rule. Barely a hundred yard-* broad, j this strip of land, belonging to Wal- i thamstow parish, ran right across Ley- | ton from the lea to Snaresbrook, par allel with tlie southern border of Wal thamstow. now came Leyton to be crossed by this alien strip? Leyton, j it was said, had once refused to bury J a body fouud in the lea; Walthamstow ; came forward to do It. And in such cases it was the rule that the volun- | teering parish might take from the j other as much land right through to j the other side as the men who carried the corpse could cover walking in line hand in band arms extended. The inconvenient result worried both par ishes until the growth of population made new parishes necessary.—London Chronicle. Wasted on Him. "Occasionally," remarked the visiting Londoner, "I see in some American pa per a supposititious colloquy referring to an aeroplane line to Mars. Do you know, that strikes 1110 as being exceed ingly funny. Evidently the writer is ignorant of the fact that our atmos phere does not extend upward more than fifty or a hundred miles and be comes more and more tenuous as it nears the limit. lie does not seem to know that the air is absolutely neces sary in flying an aeroplane. It is high ly probable that uo aviator ever will ascend to a higher elevation than teu or fifteen miles even if he can endure | Beginning Friday 7 , January 6th, we Offer the Following Goods at Closing Out. Prices Ladies and Misses Coats I Very Special Sale of Dress Goods MILLINERY All $5.00 Trimmed Hats $2.50 All $25,00 Coats reduced to $r6. 75 29c All 98 Trimmed Hats ..98 All 22.50 Coats reduced to 15.00 * , All $?. so Trimmed Hats 1.75 Black and White and Brown and white checks and gray • u „ t ,. , „ - All 20.00 Coats reduced to 14.50 . , _ . . . . All $2.50 Trimmed Hats i.2 0 mixed wool Dress Goods 36 inch vyide, oq All #2.00 Trimmed Hats 1.00 All 18.50 Coats reduced to 13-75 The regular 50c quality, sale price All <1.50 Trimmed Hats 75 All 18.00 Coats reduced to 13.50 $2.00 Black Broadcloth, 54 inches wide, $l5O All $1.25 Trimmed Hats 62 . ' $1.50 Navy Blue broadcloth 54 inch wide iQ 50c Men's Soft Finished Shirts 39c An 15.00 Coats reduced to 10.00 ' s a ] e price | All 13.50 Coats reduced to 9.25 SI.OO Myrtle Green broadcloth, 54 inch wide 1 .1! ~ ' "»1 (ji..ilit\, nu.t pattenis and ha\i tin 11 All 12 .,0 Coats reduced to 8.98 •* »"« \ aii u.oo coats reduced t„ •••... 7.98 5W " ch " ,ide SI.OO 15c Men's Black Fleeced Sox lie. All 8.75 Coats reduced to 5.98 SI.OO Brown Broadcloth 54 inch wide yo These are our regular 15c quality; too many in stock that's All 7.50 Coats reduced to 5.00 Sale price .13 the reason for this reduction. All 5.98 Coats reduced to 3.98 85c No. 9, Striped Belting and Tie Ribbon, light ground with arid Misses* Suits All Remnants of Dress Goods 1-4 Off cross stripes. Regular price 25c, -sale price sc. CtlllA 1 1133v3 L/Ulvo , *» . i Inch wide velvet Ribbon 111 navy, brown, light blue and i ..... c . . from Regular Prices. • Kree „, pr i ce per yd ioc. 4 <_, inch all silk Glace Ribbon, ill various shades; regular Best Quality American Prints 6c P rice w* SaU ' P rice loc Navy blue and white, gray and black and liyht Shirtings White Ostrich Plumes 1 '-5" » 111 N ' a jj j„ neat patterns, absolutely fast colors /» All 13.00 Suits 9.98 Sale price per yard " c $5.00 White Ostrich Plumes, sale price >2.50 All 12.00 Suits 7 <>B $3.00 White Ostrich Plumes, sale price 1.00 — checked and Striped Flannelettes per yard 1 Shell Goods, Much Below Cost Children's Coats, 1-4 Off Bargains in Table Damask A t»we rmi »i curved nam.-te», c..mbs.sue * etc. values up to 511 c. Sale price 10c. From the regular prices Mercerized Table Damask in lengths of 2, 2 «.»',•# 00 Crepe, IScsl t l ua,lt >'« I and 3 yards, excellent patterns, Sale priee per yard . OJC regular price 18c per yard. Sale price 14c. All linen Table Damask 6s iuclic- wide, of very goo«l ■ #■■■■ llft I ■*" r , iD 1/lirUMr Emporium'. rsrr* J ' 4 .'D If liniNl Em p° riums n KUrnNt Greatest Store ' i,y Ul 62c ;Ha IV. UE.IiIM L ■ Greatest Store Ili lIU la Ilift lay ureaiest j ■ 7 the excessive cold he will enconnter at thai altitude. The idea of sailing an aeroplane through the Imponderable ether is Ineffably absurd." Chicago Tribune. Help the Children. "There is nothing in all the world so important as children, nothing so Interesting. If you ever wish togo in for some philanthropy, If you ever wish to be of any real use in the world, do something for children. If you ever yearn to be truly wise, study chil dren. We can dress the sore, bandage the wounded, imprison the criminal, heal the sick and bury the dead, but there is always a chance that we can save a child. If the great army of philanthropists ever exterminate sin and pestilence, ever work out our race's salvation, It will be because a little child has led them."—David Starr Jordan. Strange Storehouses. In the old birds' nests that are placed near the ground in shrubs and small trees close to hazelnut bushes and bit tersweet vines one will often find a handful of hazelnuts or bittersweet berries. They were put there by the white footed mice and the meadow mice, which visit these storehouses reg ularly. Very often a white footed mouse will cover a bird's nest with fine dried grass and inner hark and make a nest for Itself.—New York Tribune. Three Inscriptions. On the doorways of Milan cathedral are three inscriptions. The first, placed under a carved rose wreath, ruus, "All that which pleases is only for a mo ment." The second, under a cross, reads, "All (hat which troubles is but for a moment," and under the central arch is the inscription, "That only is which Is eternal." A Popular Game. "Many games originated from an cient forms of worship, human sacri fice, marriage, burial and other cere monies," Dr. A. O. 11 addon remarked in an address at the Royal Sanitary institute. "Leapfrog is a game com mon to almost every country, Includ lng New (Juinea and Japan."—London Standard. Dying of Love. "Och!" said a love sick Hibernian "What a recreation it is to be dying of love! It sets the heart aching so delicately there's no taking a wink of sleep for the pleasure of the pain.— London Telegraph. i 1 Not Jealous. Mrs. Jawback John, I do believe you are iealou- of my first husband. Mr. Jawback—Well, no; I don't believe : I'd call it jealousy. Envy is the word. -"•Cleveland Leader. CAMERON COUNTY PRESS, THURSDAY, JANUARY 5, 1911. Saves Two Lives. ' Neither my sister nor myself might be living to-day, if it had Dot beeu for Dr. King's New Discovery" writes A. D. McDonald, of Fayetteville, N. C., It. F. D., No. 8, "For we both had fright ful eonghs that no other remedy could help. We were told my sister had con sumption. She was very weak and had night sweats but your wonderful medi cine completely cured us both. It's the best T ever used or heard of." For sore lungs, coughs, colds, hemorrhage, la grippe, asthma, hay fever, croup, whoop ing cough,—all bfonchial troubles, —its supreme. Trial bottle free. 50c and SI.OO. Guaranteed by all druggists. A Reliable Cough Hedicine. Is a valuable family friend. Foley's Honey and Tar fulfills this condition ex actly. Mrs. Charles Kline, N. Bth St., Easton Pa., states: "Several members of my family have been cured of bad coughs and colds by the use of Foley's Honey and Tar and I am never without a bottle in the house. It soothes and re lieves the irritation in the throat and loosens up the cold. I have always found it a reliable cout:h cure.'" Sold by Emporium Drug Co. PINEULES for the Sidneys 30 DAYS' TREATMENT FOR SI.OO MIYSKIDNIYCURE Makes Kidneys and Bladder Right smmm&j ■ wmmmm 111 IIM> |||| Season - End Sale, of ds:L, Ladies Suits and Goats high-grade ■=— =- ■ /" I ;l garment at the . / j J AT PRICES ONE-FOURTH LESS THAN REGULAR. The best styles . P"ce oi (112 j j 11 and the newest fabrics—our entire stock, every garment in the the l| . kj ! store has had the price slashed to the limit The sooner you commonplace. |jji i| come, the better the selections. fj 112 J ,1 Coppersmith's For either acute or chronic kidney dis orders, for annoyiug and painful urinary irregularities take Foley Kidney Pills. An honest and effective medicine for kidney and bladder disorders. Sold by Emporium Drug Co. You Can't Be Downhearted. That is, you can't while you are taking Sexinc Pills. They dispel the despon dency and by their fine tonic action re place that worn-out, "all-in" condition with buoyancy, vigor and good cheer. Price 81 a box; six boxes $5, fully guar anteed or the money-back plan. Ad dress or call at Dodson's Drug Store where they sell all the principal remedies and do not substitute. Foley Kidney Pills. Are tonic in action, quick in results. A special medicine for all kidney and bladder disorders. Mr. James Cantwell, Williamsport, Pa., says: For twenty years or more I had kidney trouble and suffi ret' a severe backache with annoying urinary irregularities. At tin.es I felt miserable and all played out. I finally got some of Foley Kidney Pills and after taking them a short time my backache left me and my kidney action became free aud natural and without more pain. 1 take pleasure in recommending Foley Kidney Kidney Pills to all suffering with kindey trouble." Sold by Ktiiporiuui Drug Co. For Ladrippe, Coughs and Stuffy Colds. Take Foley's Honey and Tar. It civcs <juick relief and expels the cold from your system. It contains no opiates, is safe and sure. Sold by Em porium Drug Co. Foley's Kidney Remedy—An Appre ciation. L. McConnell, Catherine St., Elmira. N. Y., writes: "I wish to express my appreciation of the great good I derived from Foley's Kidney Remedy, which I used for a bad case of kidney trouble. Five bottles did the work most effectively and proved to me beyoud doubt it is the most reliable kidney medicine I have taken," Sold by Emporium Drug Co. Solves a Deep riystery, "I want to thank you from the bot tom of my heart," wrote C. R. Rader, of Lewinburg, W. Va., "for the wonder ful double benefit 1 got from Electric I'it ters, in curing me of both a severe case of stomach trouble and of rheumatism, from which I had been an almost help less sufferer for ten years. It suited my case as though made just for me." For dyspepsia, indigestion, jaundice and to rid the system of kidney poisons that cause rheumatism, Kleetric Bitters has no (final. Try them. Every bottl.j is guaranteed to satisfy. Only 50c at all druggists. Mountain Park Green House. Ridjfway, Pa, We have the largest and most up-to date GREEN HOUSE In Western Pennsylvania. All orders left at Geo. J. Laßar's, Emporinra, Pa., will receive prompt and careful attention. Satisfaction guaranteed. 52-ly. f&ISEEDS ~* r * ,o r SPECIBI. OFFER iWStr p AMOUS COLLECTION 00 Day Tomato . . . . 20a | 1 pkg. I'rineeM Itndish . . • . IMr 1 pKg. SclMirowlntr Celery . . . SOt I pk*. Early Arrow-hrad Cnhhar* • . . tfi* 1 |>kp. FullfMnn Market l.etture . . . 10# Also 12 Varieties Choice Flower Seed* . . 2:.r *I.OO Writ® today! Send 10 cent* to help p- pottage and parking and receive the abovo "Faimn:« Collection," to gether with o«r New nnd 1 fisrd n (Jui'lo. | GREAT NOUTIIEUN FriKl> <O. I 476 Uose St. Rock ford, Illinois [
Significant historical Pennsylvania newspapers