WOMEN • Women of the highest type, women of superior education and refinement, whose discernment and judgment give weight and force to their opinions, highly praise the wonderful corrective and curative properties of Cham berlain's Stomach and Liver Tab lets. Throughout the many stages of woman's life, from girlhood, through the ordeals of mother hood to the declining years, there is no safer or more reliable med icine. Chamberlain's Tablets are sold everywhere at 25c a box. Foley's Kidney Pills Whmt Thty Will Do fcr You They will cure your backache, strengthen your kidneys, cor "ect urinary irregularities, build p the worn out tissues, and liminate the excess uric acid hat causes rheumatism. Pre sent Bright's Disease and Dia bates, and restore health and strength. Refuse substitutes. Emporium Drug Company Roof Slating I am especially prepared to Contract for Slating By thi- squi >e or job. As to my work iniiDship, refer, IJV perniiHHion, to the work recently completed for the Hon. B. W. Green. GEORGE A. WRIGHT. Get My Prices Before You Use Shingles ssMP r. i |OTEL j I Euiopir.i), SI.OO pet* day and up I (I American, $2.50 per d-iy and up I '*• - '- s ' (Midway between Broad Street Station and Reading Terminal on Filbert Street. The anly moderate priced hotel ol reputation and consequence in PHILADELPHIA CHICHESTER SPILLS DIAMOND BRAND I.ADIF3 t — ~r A»v your l>n. K(r l.t for Cnt CHES TER'S A DIAMOND BRAND PILLS in RKD udA& Goi.n uimlUc twin, scaled with BIJ 'O) Ki on T.\KB HO i rBBS llnr oF jnnr V/ Druc'TNt and uak fur IIKS-Tt H 8 V DIAUiIMi RBAXD PII.LH, fort < mv-fi*o yenrn regarded n» Best, Safest, Always Ki liatilc. SOLD BY ALL DRUGGISTS S EVERYWHERE %£& memv r "rrjrsfry^ iUWiW r '* ! v F^ c i : ™L E | I (kur 4 i j L La, I J lIBITHi »»iHt CO.. »OJC 74. L»*C»«Tm. y. [ Sold m Emporium t>y L. Taggarf and * C Mion OVER 65 YEARS' peri Mb V J J i L J » 1 Ikm I J t I I «| -I To»nr Li. Uk| Designs "" ' COPYRIGHTS Ac. ♦ von« aanrtli * a *kat< h M i,.| tl«arrtn(l< n ma? i, i. .if 4ie»it4»«n « r u fr«« whtfiiiar an 11vuitt i' t» ia i rMhal-i) pHtMiit «i'la. < oinuiunira i i* »iiH(l«utial. MANOeOOK on I'aiauu a»--it > 112 for I'uf. I.la tuk< it 11" itfti Mui.u xi o. ft-ialva «l»fu e, *«• l '»ut ct lu th«» Scientific American. A iiiuftt r«t»l wtit kly I *t Hr- Ci«!at> u• 112 a'tV •« iauilD t uru»i 'I * l a ta if ; 112 ih#, |L MoUl U)f ail i«<*•• • M ui• NIUNN S CO Jh 1 H.. ,(!«». New York 4i. Ii > I m . '.III Jfk A FREE TRIAL Jfs PACKAGE IJVft'SV: JuJl n*' I ii.% a »«4«Miii.. J -tin. M 1,,, .«4 » !•#»■ »«W •*' ''' • ll. Hl'fc lies*. lit'n.p* |.kt. Sil vtutfc*. fclllftt t »m 4 n,MM !•»«» lIMM' Omi »' C«M» Pneumonia l-ollows a Cold. 15ut never follows the use of Foley's lliiue) 1 .iiid Tar, which ih' cough hml ex pel* the cold. M Slock well, llannitml, Mo., «IVK It bents all the rcinedicN I ever used. I contracted a bad cold and cough and was threatened with pneu monia. One bottle of Foley's Honey and Tar completely cured mo." No opiates, just a reliable household medicine. Sold by Emporium Drug Co. Tax Appeal Notice. "VfOTICE is hereby given that the annual Tax _L> vppeal meet I nit will be held at the office of the County Commissioners, Emporium, Pa., on Monday and Tuesday, February, 'JOth and 21st, 1911, between the hours of nine a. in., and three p. m.to heat appeals from the assessments for 1911. J. W. LEWIS, 8. P. KREIDER, GEO. MINARD, Attest:— County Commissioners. W. L. THOMAS, Clerk. 50-lt Pure Water! DRINK Sizerville Mineral Water Clean, Pure and Healthy. We are prepared to furnish the citizens of Emporium this popular Water, either PLAIN OR CARBONATED, in bottles. Drop a postal card—we will do the rest The analysis of the celebrated Sizerville Water has made it famous all over the country. Orders may be left at Geo. F. Balcom store, or water may be purchased by the case at the same place. Address, Magnetic Mineral Water Co., SIZERVILLE, PA. Reduction in Hardware A big reduction of 20 per cent, will be made on all enamel and tin ware and in fact all articles in the hardware line. Save a dollar here on every five dollar purchase. A trial will convince you. F. W. Dininny BROAD STREET. COUDERSPORT &. PORT ALLEGANY R. R Taking ett'ect Aug. 22. 1909. EASTWARD ti 10 2 4 ;8 STATIONS. »ort Allegany, Lv. *2 :ii fl 37 *7 ?2 00 /hemical Works.... *2 :JH 00 00 ° iurtville 2 41 11 48 7 22 9 11 Roulette, . 256 11 57 7 30 9 23 Kin»wlton's, *3 00 12 01 00 ° Mina 3 OH 12 07 7 40 9°33 Olmsted 110 11 11 •? »» 9 . 3 18 12 20 7 52 9 45 Coudersport. '' A.M. H 10 12 37 N'«.rth < JoiMtonpOl I. *ll II Prink's, *6 50 ... *l2 19 ( olfsburK. 57 12 57 St.i n Uri»l 1 .... *1 02 RUVIIIOIMU, ... 1 113 (iold, 7 I 19 New field, 1 23 NewlieWJun7 8 6 < ole*bktrM r »4 .. . . 7 Ml *4 M> N t*%% licit I *2 Nr*ft* iwmij rmil»ri 11...1 p«..t illegal* y all otK*r <«au» rua * Ki4K iUUUA* I'f »iu» «lo uot atup * f'Trif mph r# TmiM IUM on u Ttui* ■ unti At I ijiM** with Kali Hruofc K » 112 pi- >'§ ~i I . ilj.l a- »ll». it V H. JMIU). Hi *il<> Buff*!" £ »«bauna H I t...i 11. for ' iuii« M >ullt fur'talel"* *U«J VUtU i' ill ,rt wilti i mu» t a it «atrU* t Muftlft • fllraci Mr iitfi.nl s*|»Uug ' .muiil, Vu«4ut a \ vic« iA ui. «»* i» _ « .C I CAMERON COUNTY PRKSS, THURSDAY, FEBRUARY 16. 191 r. A Tabor Story. Count Boyt-ntii. Mil " Modjeska's | husband, wiiN wlili Sennior Tabor for Modi !>.l'h lirsi i!i ~c;ir.-iuee In IK'IIVIT, mitt tin' founder of dramnt ic nrt 111 ljt'iivcr asked what purls klh* played.' "Well," wild the count, ''there is 'Mary Stuart.'" "Who wrote it?" asked Tabor. "Schiller." said the count. "Is he,a first class dramatist?" ask ed Tabor. "Surely, surely," said the count. "He Is most Illustrious." "Humph! Never hoard of him." commented Tabor. "What else does she do?" " 'As You Like It,' 'Antony and Cle opatra,' 'Macbeth' "Who wrote them?" "Shakespeare." "How's he? Good writer?" "Excellent, excellent." "Well," said Tabor rumlnntively, "those fellows may be all right as au thors, but they ain't well enough known to suit the people out here. What we want is something popular, something that everybody's hoard of. I tell you what you do—you get her to give us something of Iloyt's!" Fearful Fate of Ravaillac. In these days when executions, if held at all. are mostly carried out in private, it is difficult for us to under stand the feelings of savagery with which an old time mob witnessed a popular execution. Here is Bionndelle lturton's account—from "The Fate of Henry of Navarre"—of the scene when Ravaillac, the assassin of the king, had. after shocking frtures, been torn asunder by wild horses: "The execu tioner had begun to dismember him and was about to cast his remains into the second caldron when the vast crowd prevented liiin from doing so. They each required a portion oft lie body of the king's assassin, and most of them obtained one. That night many bonfires blazed in and around Paris, and in their midst were con sumed pieces of Itavaillac's frame; 011 barn doors in other places were nailed similar scraps of his body, as hawks and owls and carrion crows were nail ed as a warning to others of their breed." Grant and Pickett. New evidence that the great men are the true men—true to themselves, to their country and to their friends appears in a story told in Colonel Nich olas Smith's book. "Grant, the Man of Mystery." While Grant was president General G. E. Pickett, who led the fatal charge against the Union forces tlie last, day < at Gettysburg, called at the White ! House to pay his respects. Grant knew | that his old comrade at West Point ! had been made a poor man by the j war and offered him tile marshalship of Virginia. While sorely needing help. ' General Pickett know the heavy draft made upon the president by oitice seek ers. "You can't afford to do this for me." he said, "and 1 can't afford to take it." "1 can afford to do anything I please that is right," Grant replied quietly. Peppered Ice Cream. "There's that." said a res taurant waiter, pointing to a small silver shaker he had placed beside a heaping dish of ice cream he was car ring to a guest. ■"Sure, it's to put on the ice cream, too," he replied when an inquirer failed to see the connec tion between the two. "Lots of folks want to put pepper on their ices. You see, if a man's stomach is sensitive the cold cream hurts him, but pepper is stimulating enough to overcome the effects of the cold. And the funny thing is that you don't taste the pepper at all. The ice cream is so cold that it kills the oth er. If you don't believe it I'll give you some with pepper, and you'll find that there's no taste of pepper there at all." There wasn't.—New York Sun. Miles' Grave. "Which is the deepest, the longest, the broadest and the smallest grave in the churchyard?" said a pedestrian to his companion while meditating among the tombs in the burying ground at Esher. "Why," replied his companion, "it j is that in which poor Miles itutton lies burled, for it contains Miles below the ' sod, Miles in lonj-'h and Miles in breadth, and yet, after all, it Is but a Button-hole." — Pearson's Weekly. Effect of Tight Lacing. "Is tight lacing unwise'.-" a teacher ' asked a young lad.\ in a physiology | lessoik "Yes, it is very unwise," was there- ( |dy. "Why is It unwise'-" the teacher pur in >1 "Because it busts the corset," miid •he young lady. Kxchnnge. Maniacs. Not all the lunatics are behind the bni - Charleston (S •'.) News uu.l Courier. s». There tiro yet a few men i at huge who try to do buMnt-* with out advertising Now York Herald Distm.n| ki « ono of iheiu she threatens to toll iter ma, while the olii , or whou ki~-*'d Mil}* ,|ia will toll pa. Going Too Far, lluldliead.t! Mali (ill the witness Uj*i The 1 1.(lout il* filer was so ter riblu thai II uiinlo 111} hair simol mt 1 .ml JuOll ufe on oatll! faulia as having ov oivoutw I how that t .in . Ii .utilise to 11 i Hs OJ3?y'd Orc'trs. CM 'HI 1 V!, i.r.v In lit* "Ini > T. .1 nek.son" says til l >< 1 1 . ■ • I' ecu tlie states I ro':" 0.-t .tji .... t!»*• ] ro fcssi rol mat! .. i - . 1 lie itary College of the' Mill lie svisheil strongly to tr' o •4# < ""I of a cadet corps, but the heads of the instltu tion were desirous to have him con tinue his tea hitig. Governor '.Vise called out tin* suite ir.» 1 - IIIKI > rdcreil that a corps of cadets lie held re. dy for immediate service Jackson, then major, reported at once at the guard room as ready for duty. General Smith said: "Major Jacksrtn, you will remain as you are until further orders." Jackson at that moment was sitting 011 a cnnip stool In the guardroom with his saber across Ills knees. At reveille the next morning lie was found in the same position. "Why. major, why are you here?" ex claimed General Smith. "Because last night you ordered me to remain where I was,"was the reply. Royal Jewels In Pawn. The ex-Sultan Abdul Aziz pawned all his crown Jewels for a million francs at the Mont de Piete at Paris, and they were only just redeemed by 112 lie Moorish government in time to pre vent their being sold among other un redeemed goods. The sword of state, which is regard ed in Servia as a sacred relic, was also pawned by 11 former king, while one well known European monarch found himself in such straitened circum stances that tlie famous house of At tenborough once temporarily had pos session of all his old silver. Queen Isabella was, however, the most famous royalty who made no secret of the fact thnt she raised mon ey upon the security of the portraits of her ancestors, which hung Oil tlie Willis at the palace Catile, her Pari sian home. The royal lady often de clared how deeply she was indebted to her royal forbears for coming to her rescue and helping her out of her finan cial predicaments.—London M. A. P. The Road to Success. Just tack this up somewhere where you can see it: Success consists in getting out of yourself everything that's in you. It does not consist in doing almost quite as much or a little more than the oth er fellow. What the other fellow does doesn't amount to a dent in a door knob so far as you are concerned. The fact that he succeeds by laying an Atlantic cable, building an Eiffel tower, inventing wireless telegraphy or cornering the world's supply of oil doesn't make you a failure because you haven't got enough ready money to buy an automobile. You're successful when you put to some useful purpose every ounce of energy, every grain or gray matter, every mite of muscle that you've got. You're successful when you've developed all there is to you and have given that to the world.— Pittsburg Gazette-Times. A Hard Hearted People. Filial piety finds no place in Tibetan character. It is no uncommon thing for a son to turn his father, when too old for work, out of doors and to leave him to perish in the cold. The supersti tion that the souls of the dead can, if they will, haunt the living drives their hardened natures to gain by the exercise of cruelty the promise of the dying that they will not return to earth. As death approaches the dying person Is asked. "Will you come back or will you not?" If he replies that he will they pull a leather bag over his head and smother him. If he says he will not he is allowed to die in peace. A Lightning Change Artist. The rapidity with which chameleons change their color is marvelous. You gather one from an outdoor shrub and it immediately becomes dark, almost black, hissing and with its mouth wide open, threatening to bite. Meanwhile it is never still, hilt continues to crawl upward whenever possible—up you. up your sleeve, always upward. By de grees the augry black changes into whatever color Is nearest. If one's dress Is of a brownish color so is the cha uieleon's. The Real Thing. "Tills," sabl the young benedict who was just realizing that lie bad enught a tartar, "is what I call real married life." "I'm glad you're satisfied with some thing," she snapped. "Oil, Pui not! I merely meant to in form >Oll that it is not Ideal." Phila delphia Ledger. His Good Action. A Utile Canadian ho} went to i>od aiid then -'i.ldi'tily r> ■.•lle«t'd that ho hadn't iic one good action that day. Ills conscience was gnawing at him. He beard a little squeal In the cornor of his room, and lie gut up and ro leased ti mouse that had lieoii caught In tie' trap Then lie gave It to the cat. Expensive Fiction. "Is that picture really a work of art ?" "1 don't know," replied Mr Cumrox. "but the Htur> the dottier told ni« nlxitit 11 mirel) was " Washington Htar. Enough Said. •Thrifty. Is she';" "Thrifty! I won't go Into a long dla< oursc I Utcrd} tell }ou that she lunik lie.lie* 111 I». eiiit.er " Wash lllgtou Herald His Dilemma, -lor i'jiei I'll fU your tooth *»u can . liewithout ipttt. otiy." "If I v. is io j. ■1 o .on o I couldn't tie! anyihtirt to u*w »a " life ]' ! lb " 1 ati^mts Prize Offers from Leading Manufacturers Book on patents. "Hints to inventors." "inventions needed." "Why some inventors fail." Send rough skUch or model for searcH of Patent Office records. Our Mr. Greeley was formerly. Acting Commissioner of Patents, and as such had full charge of the U. S. Patent Office. - GREELEY &M9INTIRE PATENT ATTORNEYS fffM] WASHINGTON, D. C. H. S. LIOYD The First Requisite in 'otter writing is that the paper * r \ TJ used lie above criticism. |( fcV- M Your stationary should reflect 1 iSM your taste, character and refiue -JJ jjp"*' ment, and convey your personal i*•, " )C£i% ie ® a ' on » Crane Pike Writing jj . Ljw Paper are always the firat choice ■' 'M m \fis» diflcnminatin K people. They ("'."•M /111 V>y are by far the ftoent social corres /// I pondence papers made. They are first in quality, and absolutely correct in style. Thsir artistic and painty boxing adds much to their geneial attractiveness. Come 111 and let us btiow you our line of the j jetly popular EATON CRANE.& PIKE papers. H. S. LLOYD, Masonic Block I Our Annual Clearing Sale is, as Usual, Rich in Opportunities to Buy the Best Pianos the World Affords. A Dozen of the Oldest and Best Known Makes of Grands, Uprights and Player-Pianos are Included, Such as Cnickerings, Knabes, Hardmans, Esteys, Etc. An Opportunity for One's Piano Money to Earn 20 per cent, a Year. An Annual Sale which is Unlimited in the Variety of its Offerings and Unequalled in the Merit of its Bargains. If you are thinking about buying a ers on the globe, such as Chickering, piano; Knabe, Hardman, Estey, Conover, and If you ever expect to buy a piano; dozens of them are the cream of these If you can pay cash for it; makers' creations. Or, pay for it, say within 18 months— There are Uprights. Then this Clearing Sale of ours j There are Grands, offers -you an unexcelled opportunity There are Player-pianos, The money you have to put into a pi- in all 17K5 instruments in round figures ano will earn you 20 per cent, a year. included in the sale. Some are brand The opportunity is two-fold: new—some show that just a bit of new ist. On account of the prices. ness is gone, while others are second aiid. On account of the high j hand—-but each and every piano is character of the pianos. offered and sold under an absolute guarantee. Satisfaction is guaranteed About Prices or money refunded. The prices during this and all of our Prices and Terms preceding Annual Clearance Sales are . . reduced to actual factory cost and sell- . , " ,ces during this, as well as all ing expense. In quite a few instances similar previous sales, are substan we do not even add the selling expense. b factory cost, with selling ex- No profit is made during this sale \'o P e " se added. profit is asked We simply give you '» sonu : instances even selling ex pianos in even exchange for your ! ,c,lst ' is eliminated, the instruments be in<>nev. ,n K marked at bare factory cost, or a We do not do this the whole year v % y '»«!« above round. We can't do it " r .f rms « ,ur t in K th,s sale are s P ot « ash .... , , or its equivalent. Ihe remainder of the year goes to T , )( llwernont to , j, , la j |n the make the pratt that every legitimate , ow pr ices-not in easy terms. '• ."V We are willing, howevtr, to extend UK a piano from us now helping 11, to re . |S(>na)lll . „. rm ,> sll , h as 6 8 or t ear, up otir stock helping us reduce |S h . , , h th , •tock before inventor} gets the benn, vt ' al|i|] „ of t . O , . , 01 a price Wat umpfy cannot prevail , , all ul amount> at thc every day 111 the year and permit a ~112 #> «r cent dealer to remain in business. About Qualities Out-of-Town Cu.tomer. . , 1 Hiring this sale, as in previous years, The high character ..f our piano bus- st , lC k ,|ieei» arc exchanged each week mess i% too well known to need a wtmi ! w j t h all ..f ..ur u store so that each ' r ' 'Hi us The merits of many of the , uu | v%Kty Uno«s what pianos are pianos we sell were established year, ;u ~,1a1.1e"..t each of our other store* bet. re v were n the piano business We can tint- furnish out of town •—ami tin, 1, .ur j