KmtnuHnr.il, lHflfl. Cameron County Press HENRY 11. MVLIJN, ICdllor and Proprietor On VILLI! PtDDDroOT, Assistant and Manager RAYMOND KLKHM, AswtHtant Foreman. W. SCOTT STBKHKR, Assistant Local Editor. PUBLISHED EVERY THURSDAY WASHINGTON LETTER. [From our Regular Correspondent.! WASHINGTON, Feb. 24, 1911. Less than a week of the seeaion re mains and Congress will doubtless crowd as much legislation as possible in the final Saturday, and probably move the hands of the clock backward iu order to secure a few minutes more time. The President will be busy on March 4th, affixing his (signature to the delayed bills. Congress is working frantically in order to finish things be fore twelve o'clock March 4th. Men, legislators, statesmen, making laws for the greatest nation of the world, fritter the early days of the session most frivolously and then do hurry scurry work in final fleeting minutes. So it has beou, so it is, so it will be. Whether there will be an axtra ses sion called immediately after March the 4th depends entirely upon the act ion ot Congress on the reciprocity agreement which the President has made with the Canadian government. Much of the time of Congress has al ready been taken up listening to the selfish plaints of isolated interests —in- terests that have so long been favored that they imagino themselves the peo ple and the nation. They are active and loud and like a scant brigade marching around a hill, by their activ ity and noise make an impression up on a one-sided onlooker of the whole army. They have their representa tives in both houses of Congress, too, though some of them will not stay much longer. Bell weather Aldrich is at a southern resort having, as he says, the time of his life, and Bell weather Hale of Maine has just seven daj s more, hut he is playing his rule of obstruction)-it and will play it till the curtain falls. There will be no encores as far as he is concerned. After he is out of the Senate his inability to learn or forget will hinder progress no more. Much precious time has been wasted this session on the Lorimer case, and that portion of the Senate callery oc cupied the past week by impressioi able ladies was a scene of fashion and of tears when Senator Lorimer pleaded his case for four hours and rehearsed his career from bootblack to the Senate and explained how his success in poli tics and his electiou to the Senate was to be ascribed to popularity won by his kindness to Jew and Gentile alike. Incidentally he disclosed what kind of a statesman he is by saying that Sena tor Aldrich was his bellvyeather and that he always voted the way he did. It has long been known by the wise that in the Senate little Rhode Island swung some of the larger states, but a confession direct from Illinois may be edifying to stalwart doubters. The Japanese war scare will not down. Representative Hobson parades it in the House and says there will be war with that country in ten months or long before the completion of the Panama Canal. It seems that our treaty with that country of 1894 is about to expire and that the President has submitted to the Senate the text of a new treaty with Japau. Protests from California against this treaty are coming in. It appears that the exclu sion clause preventing the importation of Japanese coolies or laborers is omit ted from the new treaty. The situa tion is ugly, no matter what view point one may have. San Francisco, the nerve-center of the Pacific slope, is the most intensely union-labor bestridden city in the hemisphere, if not in the world. Two years ago it came near disrupting our peaceful relations with Japan by the exclusion of Japanese children from the schools. Now, after securing from Congress its approval of San Francisco for the International Ex position, it is foremost in alienating Japan on whom in great part the suc cess of thp Exposition will depend. The chief signal officer of the army, General Allen, is disposotl to matee prompt use of the twenty-five thousand dollars appropriated iu the army bill for the purpose of flying machines. This country has been behind Europ ean countries in the adoption of aero planes for military purposes. France is the leader in the art, and now has a fleet of more than thirty fliers man ned by thoroughly trained aviators. It has appropriated one hundred mil lion francs for improvements in mili tary aviation. As many as seven types of aeroplanes are used in the French equipment. Besides there are hund reds of aeroplanes owned by private individuals and should the time come for military operations, the French army would be strengthened by the skilled owners of these private flying machines. For Sale. Pure Bred R. C. Buff Orphington Cockerels, fa.oo each. Eggs SI.OO j»er setting of 13, are no w ready for delivery C. L. BORTREE, 50 3m. Hast Emporium, Pa. The Churches. EMMANUEL EPISCOPAL CHURCH. REV. M. L. TATE, Rector. The first Sunday in Lent will be ob served as follows: There will be a Celebration of the Holy Communion at 10:30 o'clock; the theme will be, "The Tempted Christ." Sunday school will meet in the Parish House at 12 m. There will be a meeting for men only at four o'clock in the Parish House. This will be a special service without an elaborate form of service. The Rector will make an address on sub ject, "The Possibility of Living Aright Anywhere." Evening prayer and sermon at 7:30 p. m. Theme, "The Greatest Con quest in the World " Strangers are always welcome at ! Emmanuel Church. FIRST METHODIST EPISCOPAL. REV. J. F. ANDERSON, Pastor. Preaching by the pastor next Sun- I day at 10:30 a. m.,*and 7:30 p. m. Class j Meeting at 9:45; Sunday School at 11:45 i a. m.; Epworth League at 6:45 p. m. As the Annual Conference "meets March 15th, it is very important that I all the affairs of th£ church needing at | tention in this year should have prompt attention. Conference meets j in Bloomsburg, Pa. FIRST BAPTIST. REV. J. L. ROGUE, Pastor. 10:30 a m.—Sermon,"Lovers of God" 11:45 a. m.—Bible School. 6:30 p. m.—Y. P. Praise Service. 7:30 p. m.—Sermon, "Moonstruck | People." A cordial invitation to all. PRESBYTERIAN CHURCH. REV. 11. H. BENT, Pastor. Services Sunday at 10:30 a. m., and j 7:30 p. m. Subject for the morning: | ''Opened Windows.". Subject for the j evening: "Better than Happy, Though | Married." John W. Sicklesmitli, Greensboro, Pa., J has three children, and like most child , ! ren they frequently take cold. "We | have tried several kinds of cough medi- I cine," he says, ' hut have never found • I any yet that did them as much good as I Chamberlain's Cough Remedy." For ! sale by all dealers. Crying for Help. Lots of it in Emporium But Daily Growing Less. j The kidueys cry l'or help. Not an organ in the whole body so I delicately constructed. Not one so important to health. The kidneys are the filters of the 1 I blood. When they fail the blood becomes foul and poisonous. There can be no health where there is poisoned blood. Backache is one of the first indications of kidney trouble. It is the kiddeys' cry for help. Heed it. Doan's Kidney Pills are what i$ wanted. Are just what overworked kidneys , need. They strengthen and invigorate the kidneys; help them to do their work. Read the proof from an Emporium citizen. Lee Halderman. Allegany Ave., Em porium. Pa., says: '•! have used Doan's Kidney and have found them to be a cure for backache and pains in the loins. I also know that this remedy acts as a tonic to the entire system," For sale by all dealers. Price 50 cents, Foster-Milburn Co., Buffalo, New York, sole agents for the United States. Re member the name—Doan's—and take no other. Avoid Frauds. A paint fraud is paint that looks fair for a year or so, and then makes re painting necessary. Don't waste your money and injure your property. The L. & M. Paint has been in use for thirty-five years. You make one-half of it by adding 3 of a gallon of Linseed Oil to each gal lon. It then costs about $1.60 per gal lon, and is the best paint that, can be made. Our sales agent is Harry S. Lloyd. Teachers! Have you seen the Bulletin of Spring Term Courses at the Clarion State Normal School? If you are a teacher, a prospective teacher, or are in any ; way concerned with schools you will i be interested to get this Bulletin which j may be had by dropping a post card to the principal, J. George Becbt, Clarion, j Pn. For Sale. | Practically new six room house; bath, j gas and water; good cellar; two lots, i 100 by 225; in good repair; concrete walks and steps; located East Fifth , street, Emporium. For particulars apply to Edward Viner, Emporium, , Pa. 51-tf. Latest Popular Music. Misß May Gould, teacher of piano ; fort has received a full line of the lat est and most popular sheet music. All the popular airs. Popular and class ical music. Prices reasonable. 4 l-ti. Hay tor Sale. First CUISH baled hay for nale at Cook j farm. Price, $20.00 per ton. CAMERON COUNTY PRESS, THURSDAY, MARCH 2, 1911 WMFRF TIIFY MAKE THINGS ! HUM. ——— A Spicy Writeup of I.aquinn and Its Industries. No, you won't find it in the geogra- ' phy or in your atlas, either, unless it was compiled very recently. But it's there, just the same. What we are driving at is that, nestled among the hills of Bradford county, on the Sus quehanna and New York railroad, 54 miles from Williamsport on one side and 16 miles from Towanda on the other, is the pleasantly located lumber ing town of Laquin, where the La quin Lumber Company cuts and man ufactures into lumber and its by-pro ducts for the Central Pennsylvania Lumber Company, who own the land and the timber in that vicinity, not less than twenty-five million feet of logs every year. Laquin is only about nine years old, but it's an extremely lively youngster. Among the industrial assets of the place are a splendid up-to-date double saw-mill,-some chemical works, a hub and veneering factory and railroad equipment, including five or six loco motives, three steam log-loaders and a lot of log ahd other cars, owned and operated by the Laquin Lumber Com pany. Then a big stave and heading factory, owned and run by the Sugar ' Trust, managed by another company, all help to boom the town and make things lively all the time. The saw-mill in its way is a cracker jack, with all modern equipments and machinery. What used to be called hard work is done automatically by skillfully-contrived machinery. In stead of heaving and tugging at the big logs the sawyer or other operator touches a lever and presto ! the work is done, before you know it. Cant hooks and pike-levers are out of date. A cast-iron "nigger" bobs up from the floor and with a jolt that would knock Jack Johnson gaily-west puts the big gest log in, shape on the saw carriage in a jiffy, and with almost human in telligence. You can almost hear the words: "Stay there now, where yon belong, or I'll give you another punch." The log is good to mind and when you look that way again in a few minutes it will be ripped up into lum ber«lvhich is taken away, trimmed, sorted and piled, partly by machinery and partly by skilled workmen, as fast as it leaves the saw. It's no trick at all to make 100,000 feet of hemlock lumber a day at Laquin. 125,000 feet is nearer the daily output of the big mill. Anyone watching the workmen around the saw-mill will be impressed with the quick motions they make. They probably have to "get there, Eli," to keep pace with the saw. To an old-timer like the writer, who used to think the old-fashioned up-and down muley-saw run by water wheel was "some pumpkins," it is a revela tion, almost startling, to see one of these keen band saws, like they have at Laquin, go through the length of the biggest log in less than no time, like a hot knife through butter. Large quantities of lath and kindl ing wood made out of slabs and odds and ends of lumber are important and profitable by-products of hemlock logs manufactured in a big saw mill. The kindling-wood business, as we said be fore, is conducted by a separate firm in Laquin. Edgings or any other bits of Lumber are cut up into pieces two inches long. Then, with the help of specially contrived fixtures, these pieces are "corded up" into oval shap ed bunches five by ten inches diameter, securely tied with tarred rope and put on the market, to be retailed at the rate of two bunches for five cents. The employes, many of them women, get something like 16 or 17 cents a hundred for putting up the bunches of kindling wood. In the hub and veneer mill they take ! beech logs and literally cut them up | into ribbons; the product being then cut into suitable length and packed in 1 neat bunches ready for market. These ' "brewer's chips," so-called, are used somehow to clarify and color the ice 1 cool lager beer that tastes so good on a ■■ hot summer day—if you like that sort 1 of thing. Most any kind of hard wood ! is grist for the mill at the chemical works, whore charcoal, wood alcohol ; and acetate of lime are manufactured. ' A car loaded with wood is run into a smoke-tight compartment or retort \ where the heat is so intense that the 1 car (the car itself being all of iron, of course) is burned into charcoal with- j out coming in contact with lire. In the operation of making charcoal the resultant smoke is condensed into liquor which in turn is refined into al oohol. The sediment left after the al cohol is taken off, mixed with lime is called acetate of lime. This product 1 is exported and used as a fertilizer and j in making certain kind of dyes. Nothing goes to waste down there. 1 Even the sawdust is a useful by-pro- | duct of the cutting. A lot of it is ship ped to market, besides what they use for fuel to run the mill. Some one has 1 said that the only thing wasted in a well-managed butcher shop now-a days is the squeal of the pig. Laquin can go them one better. Everything Is used to advantage down there but the whistle of the locomotive, and that isn't all wasted. It makes a good eye opener worth a dozen alarm clocks to get » fellow out in the morning. The Laquin n Lumber Company, 1 comported of the meniiu rs of the old firm of Barclay Brothers, of Hinnama honing, and the 11. T. Quiim Co., of Glean, N. Y., carries the names of be tween :«K) and 4(H) 'nen on its pay-rolls; ; while the stave and heading factory operator by the Sugar Trust gives em i ployraent to about 150 men. An im mense quantity of their product is pil ed under sheds ready to use—enough it seems to us to make barrels for all the sugar in the country—whether it is weighed correctly or not. Besides the 175 or more plain but comfortable dwelling houses built by the Laquin Lumber Co. and the Stave Co., to ac commodate the employees and their families, there are two prosperous churches In town- a Methodist and a Baptist; also an up-to-date flourishing graded school, kept in two seperate , buildings, with about two hundred pu pils in attendance. Employees of the company are not obliged to move out of the place to educate their children. And that means a whole lot when you come to think it over. Yes, there is a hotel there, a hotel that lias license to sell liquor, but one would hardly think j so, so far as the usual symptoms are concerned; everything is so orderly and qniet around there. The men are too busy to engage in highballs and revelry. At any rate, that was the case when the writer was there the other day. Everybody seems to be doing something or other and of course everybody is contented. Contentment and work go together, anyhow. The able-bodied man or woman who is not obliged to work for a living misses one of life's crowning joys, although they may not think so. Adam and Eve, of course, thought it was pretty tough to be kicked out of the Garden of Eden. But probably the best thing that ever happened to the old folks and their progeny (of which we are part, al though somewhat distantly connected) was when the edict went out that they must earn their own bread and but ter—and clothes, too, for that matter, when fig leaves got out of fashion. An important feature of Laquin is the large well-stocked company store, which does a thriving business and under the competent management of Mr. E. C. Council with half a dozen clerks to help him, is a great conven ience to the people in the place, and, of course, a source of profit tothe"com pany. Mr. W. L. Barclay, a member of the : Laquin Lumber Company, is the effici ent general superintendent of all the industries mentioned except the stave | mill. Mr. J A. Taylor is superinten ! dent of the stave mill. Whenever there is anything doing ! within reach that is worth while Tio | ga county men are liable to be mixed | up in it. Several of them have found their way to Laquin. F. B. Tremain, assistant superintendent; F. L. Beauge, the general bookkeeper; E. G. Smith, manager of the chemical department, and Mark and William Kennedy, hold ing responsible positions in the saw mill, are Tioga county men, well known to many readers of the Agita tor, who are important spokes in the business wheel that goes round every week day in the year in that neck of the woods.—Wellsboro Agitator. The PRESS readers will read with in torest the above article, very cleverly framed for the Wellsboro Agitator This, one of the most extensive lum bering operations in the state, is finan ced by Cameron county men—Barclay Brothers and T. H. Quinn & Co., now engaged in the same business on Straight Creek. The general manager Mr. Watson L. Barclay is a product of Cameron county and an excellent busi* ness man. Many of the employees, Messrs. Wm. Beattie, Jos. T. Drum and | other boys from '' Little Cameron" are i located at Laquin. As our county [ continues to grow in population, more industries are established, we expect to 1 see all of our "bojs" come home again 1 . The Duration of a Dream. One evening Victor Hugo was dic ; tating letters to his secretary. Over -1 come by fatigue, the great man drop ped Into a slumber. A few momenta i afterward he awoke, haunted by a j dream which, as lie thought, had ex -1 tended over several hours, and he 1 blamed his secretary for sitting there 1 waiting for him instead of wakening | him or else going away. What was his surprise when the bewildered sec j retary told him that he had only just I finished writing the last sentence dic i tated to him. Goodness. Whatever mitigates the woes or In | creases the happiness of others is a j just criterion of goodness, and wlxit ever Injures society at large or any | Individual In It is a criterion of in j iquity. One should not quarrel with i a dog without a reason sufficient to | vindicate one through all the courts i of morality.—Gold&wlth. Good Proor'. "Guess I must have born un lucky." "What makes you say thatV "Well, for instance, I went to a ball game once. There were eighteen play ers on the diamond, fifteen or twenty 011 the benches, 10,<M)l> people in the grand stand, 20.000 on the bleachers, and—the ball hit me I" -Toledo Blade. Honor Roll. Subsorilinrs of the PKKHM who have either called and paid or sent subscriptions, since the last publication oft He record; BMPomuat. Albert.). Johnson, A. Louoka, Chun. Clark, M. Pye, Ray Lyon, J. F. Fisher, Geo. J. Hoiutz. Fred Tompkins, R. R. McQnay, Geo. Trayuer, Peter Ferguson, Ward Beaton, C. E. Plasterer, J. G. Nyheart, John Hertig, J.F. Parsons, Geo. P. Jones Jos. Streich, I. H. Leggott, ifibert Faucett, Jas. B. Mulcahy, 8. D. Roblaon, A. O. Swartwood, Frank Mtindy. ('has. Baten, Christian Selbendritt, W L. Dixon, Mrs. M. Geary, Herman Anderson, M. J. Dolan. 11. C. Taylor, Mrs. F. P. Day, Mrs. M. A. Rockwell, John L.Johnson, C. H. Edwards, W. L. Thomas, William Weaver, Hon. J. C. Johnson, Chas. Barr, J. P. McNarney, Burton Housler, If. C. Olmsted, Geo. Barker, A. McDougall, t>. W. Ensign, W. Swanson, P. J. Morriasey, John Cummings, Ed. Nellis, John Zwald, F. W. Yenzer, Mrs. Mary Blitler, A. Ingersoll, Hon. N. P. Minard, Win. Carter, A. A. McDonald, John Gantz. Chas. Spangler, Joseph Kaye, Jas. J. Welsh, Thomas Gallagher, Gus Carlson, D. W. Donovan, T. L. Wheaton, Urban Butler, Mrs. J. Kackcnmeister, R. Lock wood, W. D. Moore, Miss M. Collins. John T. Howard, Jas. Murphy, M. P. Miller Jas. Kearney, W. H. Flint, Marcus Wright, Miss S. L. Chadwick, M. I* Lucore, Mrs. P. R. Beattie, EAST EMPORIUM T. N.Hackett, Mis. S. J. Hackett, T. H. Norris, C R. Husted, Alfred Johnson, J. A. McConnell, Mrs. Mary Beers, John Cronkwright, Stella Hamilton, C. E. Seely, Mrs. Nellie Danforth, Andrew Warner, Mrs. A. Kempher, Mrs. Lena Fenton. STERLING RUN. John Anderson, John E. Smith, J. A. Dice, M. W. Whiting, Geo. Ken worthy, J. H. Darren, W. H. Smith, A. L. Barr, Geo. Strawbridge, Leonard Smith. Gordan Howlett, DRIFTWOOD. O. B. Tanner, B. Nefcy, C. M. Bailey, Hon. John McDonald, S. P. Kreider, Chas. Taylor, Amos Barber L. R. Gleason it Sons, J. O. Brookbank, Alonzo Dueli. SINNAMAHONINU. T. E. Fulton, Roy Campbell, C. A. Council, Thos. N. Pitts, R. D. Walker, Miss Erraa Bennett, Joseph Kinsley, J. G. Johnson, A. L. Ensign, Henry Shade. C. W. Gray, CAMERON. E. F. Coniley, Mrs. Dan'l Sullivan, W. H. G. Walker, Ed. Stewart. SIZERVILLE. E. Victory, E. D. Sizer, Miss Dora Sizer, Jas. Ostium. CROSS FORKS. W. E. Gore, Issac Wykoff. SHEFFIELD. Leonard Evans, Thos. Mullen. NIAGARA FALLS,N. Y. Lee Swartz, N. J. Swartz, DUBOIS, PA. P. V. Daly, E. W. Kelley, C. M. Kresge MEDIX RUN, PA. McClellan Miller Norman Johnson. ST. MARYS, PA. C. G. Reed, Mrs. R. House, T. R. Lyons, L F Zaner. . CORRY. P \. Jennie Berry, Corn Bridge Co. WILLIAMSPORT, PA. Cen. Pa. Lumber Co., Rev O. S. Metzler, Don M. Larrabee, T. S. Clark. ELMIRA, V.v. Oeo. H. Spring, C iMello & Neagle RIDGWAY, PA. Mrs. E. Decker Hon. H. A. Hall. WARREN, PA. Mrs. Fred Haas. E. W. Burrows. Arden, N. Y.-W. A. McClelHn. Westboro, Wis.—A. D. McDonald. Pine River, Minn.—A. M. Berth>ld. Challee.Pa. —Mrs M,J McLaughlin. Hicks Run. Pa.—John M. Hicks. Leconter Mills, I'a. -Mrs. Cora Coudreit. Charleston, W. Va.—William Hamilton. Lvnn, Mass. -Chas. Gleason. Wilcox, Pa.—Thos. Moore. Lowell, Wash.—R. F. Connor. Kane, Pa.—John Given. Lake Helen, Fla.— Miss Mary Bnrkle. Detroit, Mich.—Mrs. M. P. Brady. Evanston, 111.—Mrs. C. C. Small. Elkland, Pa.—J. R. Libby. Fitmore, N. Y.—W. H. Lapham. First Fork, Pa.—L. C. Wykoff. Downsville, Wis.—Michael Smith. Clarion, P.—Miss Alice Quigley. Reading, Pa.—C. R. Kline. Galeton, Pa. -W. C. Darbyabire. Austin, Pa.—H. C. Jones. Marianna. Pa.—R. B. Whitinjt. Chambersburg, Pa.—Wm. Buchanan. Olean, N. Y.—Edwin Coleman. Woolricli, Pa.—Lloyd McCloskey. Lock Haven, Pa.—R. W. Barrows. Franklinville, N. Y.—Mrs. B. A. Slocuni. Skaueateles Falls, N. Y.—Mrs. Julia Knaule, Durand, Mich.—J. P. Dodge. Ithaca, N. Y.-W. J. Bells. New York City—Mrs. K. M. Newton. Harrisburg, Pa.—J. S. Spicer. Philadelphia, Pa.—Murrell Dobbins. Danville, Pa.—Wm. Benty. Wharton, Pa.—Mrs. W. J. Allen. Kenosha, Wis.—Ed. Tracy. Westboro, Wis.—J. W. Kaye. Foster Brook, Pa.—E. B. Sage. Allenhurst, Ga.—E. D. Brink. Jacksonville, Fla.—Mrs. M. H. Bisel. Farmington, W. Va.—Harry Smith. New London, Conn.—Mrs. j. 8. Klinefelter. Alliance, O.—Wm. Schutte. Cuba, N. Y-—Adella Carter. Hyner, Pa.—M. L. Cummings. Bedry-Wooly, Wash.—Chas. E. Kaye. Binghamton, N. Y.—Chas. T.Logan. Beechwood, Pa.—Wm. McDonald. Chicago, 111.— H. G. Seger. Hicks Run, Pa.—Thos. Ford. First Fork. Pa.—M. J. Logue. Elwood City, Pa. -D. J. Mulcahy. Poughlreepsie, N. Y.—J. R. Heilman. Jameitown, N. Y.--A. F. Morgan. Watsontown Pa.—A. Hockley. Williamsburg, Mass.—H. H. Nichols, Germantown. Pa.- Miss C. E. Mullin. Buffalo, N. Y.—Fred R. Heilman. Sclinectady, N. Y.—Chas. Wiley. Gardeau, Pa.—Karl Zinimer. Sherman. N. Y.—Mrs. C. E. Cobb. Calgary, Canada—Mrs. S. J. Fee. Athens, Tenn.-J. E. Rhodes. Portland. Ore.—Mrs. F. W. Aycrs . Laquin, Pa.—W. L. Barclay. Seattle, Wash.—Geo. B, Bavelay. New London, Wis.—Geo. W. Guinn. Pittsburg. Pa.—L. A. Sterrett. Grafton, 111. —Leo Peterson. B ~ T ~ MAIL ORDER PIRATES Lzp nrJ I —.3" They sail the high and low seas of commerce. They pay millions a year for advertising. Their profit is millions. Spike their guns wit'.i generous advertising in this —ycxur home paper. i ' Use the mail order's own weapon—• ADVERTISING 't ; a (Cu.iyrigiil, rnjj, by > l< I Kills n Murderer. A iiicrcilimurderer is A|'p< txlicitin willi many vitritUM, hut I»r. Kind's New Life Pilln kill it by prevention They greatly stimulate stomach, liver and bowels, preventing that dogging that invited appendicitis, curing Constipation, Headache, Itilimisncs, Chills. 2. r tc at all druggists. A riother's Safeguard. Foley's Honey and Tar for children. Is best and safest for all coughs, colds, croup, whooping cough and bronchitis. No opiates Sold by Emporium Drug Co. Not Cute Enough. Naturally people dislike feeling: that they are not cute enough in business. Hut no person who is run down can ex pect t<» be at his best. Sexine Pills make men and women brighter aud stronger, they make you feel better in every way. Price 81 a box; six boxes si>, with full guarantee. Address or call on R. C. Dodson, Druggist, Emporium Pa., where they sell all the principal remedies and do not substitute. When you have rheumatism in your foor or instep apply Chamberlain's Lini meut and you get quick relief'. Tt costs but a quarter. Why suffer? For sale by all dealers. A Cold, LaUrippe, Then Pneumonia. Is too often the fatal sequence. Foley's Honey and Tar expels the cold, checks the lagrippe, and prevents pneu monia. It is a prompt and reliable cough medi tine that contains no nar cotics. It is as sale for your children as yourself. Sold by Emporium Drug Co. The most common cause ol insomnia is disorders of the stomach. Chamber lain's Stomach aud Liver Tablets correct these disorders and enable you to sleep. For sale by all dealers. "Foley's Honey and Tar is the best cough remedy I ever used as it quickly stopped a severe cough that had long troubled me," says J. W. Kuhn, Prince ton, Nebr. Just so quickly and surely it dcts in all cases of coughs, colds, lagrippe and lung trouble. Refuse substitutes. Sold by Emporium Drug Co. A Special Hedicine for Kidney Ail. ments. Many elderly people have found in Foley's Kidney a quick relief and per manent benefit from kidney and bladder ailments and from annoying urinary ir regularities due to advancing years. Isaac N. Regan, Farmer, Mo., says: "Foley's Kidney Remedy effected a com plete cure in my case and I want others to know of it. Sold by Emporium Drug Co. Caution Notice All persons are hereby forbidden from trespassing upon the property of this Company Sinnamahoning Works, Emporium Works and Keystone Works, without a permit from this office, or the Manager at the works. KEYSTONE NATIONAL POWDER CO. Bmporium, Pa., Jan. Ist 1911 Cedar Shiugles §4.50 per thousand at C.B. Howard & Co's. WANTED AT ONCE. Localandtravelingsalesmef in this state to represent us. Thereif money in the work for YOU solicitini for our easy selling specialies. Appb now for territory. A LLEN NURSERY CO., Rochester N. \ 5-ni. Queried the Maiden Sweet, Of the man who sold seed of seeds that will grow. I would wish to sow, Would you recommend LAKE vSHORE, Quoth the merchant forever mote North, south, east and west, LAKE SHORE Seeds are best. Buy LAKE SHORE SEEDS from your home merchant. Largest packages. Best quality. WON'T STAY DOWN How's This? We offer One Hundred Dollars Re ward for any case of Catarrh that cannot be cured by Hall's Catarrh Cure. F. J. CHENEY & CO.. Toledo, O. We, tlie undersigned, liavo known I''. J. Cheney for the last li> years, find believe him perfectly honorable in all business transactions ami financially able to carry nut any obligations maile by his firm. NATIONAL BANK OF COMMERCE, Toledo, O. Hall's Catarrh Cure is taken Internally, (irtinfr directly upon the blood and mu tons surfac.-s of the system. Testimonial* lent free. I'rice 7. r > cents p>r bottle. SoIO «V all PrußKlsts. Take llall's Family Pills for constipation.
Significant historical Pennsylvania newspapers