EMPORIUM MILLING COMPANY. LIST. Kniporium, Pa., April 27, 1808. NKMOPHIL.A, pvrdack, $1 f»0 Graham, *' X(i Rye " 60 Buckwheat. 44 '. Patent Mea1..,.. 10 Coarse Meal, per 100, 90 Chop Peed, " 90 Middlings, 44 90 Bran, 41 90 Corn, per bushel, 60 White Oats, per bushel, 40 Choice Clover Seed, Choice Timothy Seed, .... Choice Millet Heed, 1 Market I rices. Fancy Kentucky Blue Grass, J LOCAL SIEPA3ITMENT. PERSONAL CiOSSIS*. Contributions invited. That which you would like to see in this department, let UH know by poa tal card, letter, or personally. . 11. Howard visited Olean Tues day. Geo. B. Barclay, of Grove, was in town yesterday. John M. English, of Mason Hill, was in town on Monday. Henry Auchu says he "lias two pairs 01 souvenir spoons." Mrs. Rockwell has started the soda fountain for the season Dr. Baker and wife are comfortably located in Odd Fellows block. Chas. A. Stebbins, of Coudersport, was in Emporium on Tuesday. Geo. Calkins, of Renovo, visited his parents in Emporium, this week. The Misses Wiley have returned from an extended visit at Buffalo. Mr. Stark, late clerk at Taggart's drug store, has returned to Scranton. Our esteemed townsman, John F. Parsons, was a PRESS visitor on Tues- j day. Supt. Day, at our Tannery, has his j dummy yard engine in running order again. Misses Eva and Iva Le'et and Miss j Myrtle Olmsted were PRESS visitors on Tuesday. Mr. Josiah Howard attended the j funeral of Rev. Raikes at Buffalo, last Saturday. Mrs. w. 11. Howard, children and nurse, leave to-day to visit relatives at Philadelphia. Orrin Easterbrooks, who has been on the sick list, for some weeks, is able to bo out again. D. N. Lacy, of Austin, is in town assisting in working up the Protected Home Circle. Miss Florence Olmsted has came home from Buffalo to spend a few weeks with her parents. g WAR PRICES COHING! BE PREPARED! g ■ LOTHINGr $ ' I H - if 1 1 iIE GREAT AUCTION SALE..! jpj|j Comprising the entire stock recently purchased new, will commence | SATURDAY EVENING, MAY 7th, 1898. |f ip§i And continue for two weeks, at | R. SEGER & SON'S CLOTHING BAZAAR, | NEXT DOOR TO BANK. |jj|j This sale will consist ol the most stylish Clothing ever exhibited in Cameron county, as well as a general assortment of !|P £S& Gent's Furnishings, Trunks, Etc. These are not old shelf-worn goods, but were recently purchased in New York City. f£2gj kg The popular auctioneer, Mr. A. H. KING, of Erie, will have charge of the sale. This will be the greatest opportunity for the lit y|| citizen of Cameron and adjoining counties to secure first-class goods at auction prices. Ladies will be provided with seats and 5*3 |&3 will be welcome. Remember sale every evening, commencing with next Saturday evening and continue for two weeks. |g| H R. SEGER & SON, I II The Popular Clothiers and Furnishers. ||jj Mrs. Geo. A Walker and Mrs. G. J. | Laßar went to Williamsport yesterday | to visit friends for a few days. W. 11. Taylor and wife have return ed from Philadelphia and will make i their home in Emporium. | Mrs. J no. J. Hinkle has returned ( from Philadelphia where she visited i with her husband for two weeks, i! Mrs. P. E. Lewis made the PRESS ! sanctum her annual visit and the PRESS goes to her address another year. Geo. Johnson, salesman for Empori i urn Glove Factory, returned home Tuesday. He had a successful trip. Amos C. Fenton was a visitor to the : PRESS yesterday and enrolled his i name on the Bucktail list of volunteers. Wm. Hackenburgand wife, of Austin, I visited in Emporium over Sunday, i guests of Judge Bonham and family. Porter Dougherty and wife, of I Elmira, N. Y., are guests of their I parents, J. H. Calkins and wife, this j week. j John T. Earl, ofDepew, N. Y., was in Emporium last Saturday calling on old friends. He dropped into see the PRESS. The ladies of the Baptist church J realized §18.90, clear of all expenses, j at their chicken and waffle supper, ! last Friday. L. B. Seibert, of Coudersport, passed through Emporium on Monday en route for Philadelphia to attend U. S. : i court. Lute has the war fever bad. Edward Blinzler informs the PRESS that he will not construct any more i refrigerators—Clarence Richie to the ! contrary, notwithstanding. H. Francisco and Amos Horning have moved into the Iron Company house and will look after that com ; pany's property at this place. Mrs G. S. Allen has returned from visiting her parents in New York. Mrs. Allen came via Philadelphia, where she visited with friends several days. Miss Hattie Stnutz, of Ticlioute, is visiting at the home of E. G Coleman this week. She is a sister of Mr. Ralph Smutz, the polite salesman em ployed in J. H. Day's store at this place. Chas. Fillinger, of this place, was called to Montoursville, last Thursday, to attend the funeral of his father, aged 69 years. Deceased was stricken with paralysis while out duck hunting and died Thursday evening. His funeral took place last Saturday from Montoursville Episcopal church. De ceased leaves a wife and four sons, Charles, of Emporium; Thomas, of Ridgway; Joseph, of Coudersport, and John, of Jamison City. CAMERON COUNTY PRESS, THURSDAY, MAY S", 189«. Mioses Laura MeQuay and Nellie ' Lingle were PRESS callers yesterday. Jos. Kissel, of Sterling Run, shook . hands with his Emporium friends last . Tuesday. W. H. Welsh goes to Watsontown, l on Saturday to erect a dwelling house : for his brother. H. Paul Minard, of Austin, was in Emporium last Sunday. Col. Parker Jackson can tell you all about it. Leary, Parker? Dr. J. M. Card and wife and son, ' who have been quite seriously indis : posed for several weeks, are now up and about again. Don't fail to attend the great auction sale at R. Seger & Son's clothing store. See ad on another page—sth page. What's the matter with our public roads that wheelmen don't use them ? ' Pedestrians will be compelled, in self protection, to adopt plans of their own. Never give yourself the thought for one moment that clothing will not in crease in price if war continues. In order to protect your interests lay in your supply of clothing now, before j the advance takes place. N. Seger, > the pioneer clothier of Cameron county, | J will protect you in this matter and sell j I you clothing at right prices. To Tax Payers. Notice is hereby given to the delin quent tax payers of Shippen township that all taxes must be paid at once. I ! : will be at the Warner House, Empori um, for the purpose of receiving taxes, each Saturday. In case I am called to visit said delinquents I shall make a levy unless the taxes are paid. P. S. CULVER, Shippen Tax Collector. j Sterling Run Letter. J. E. Lewis, son of Thos. M. Lewis, J of Sterling Run, has enlisted in the j 05th New York National Guard, Buf falo, N. Y., Co. I, and started with. regiment under Col. Welsh, last Sun- j day, May Ist, for Hempstead, Long | Island. Bessie M. Kissell and Rufus Baker, 1 of Coudersport, were married on Wed- j nesday afternoon at the residence of the bride's father at this place, by Rev. M. C. Piper. The Sterling-Driftwood base ball i game, Tuesday afternoon ended in a jangle in the fourth inning, Sterling i one run ahead. About twenty of our citizens signed their names for enrollment in the ; National Reserve Provisional Guards , under Chas. Gleason. Fulton & Pearsall. These up-to-date painters have con- i solidated their business and may be j found at their shop in Parsons' Bazaar, j Both are practical painters and will give prompt attention to all work en-; trusted to them. Estimates furnished j for all kinds of house, sign and deco- j rative painting as well as wall paper- 1 ing and frescoing. Espechil attention : given to out of town orders. 47tf. ALL SORTS. Everyone who has diphtheria, croup, quinsy, catarrh or sore throat, can pos itively and speedily bo cured by Thompson's Diphtheria 28-ly The loud talking patriots are anxious togo to the front—that is if they can be generals or admirals. Thirty-five years make a generation That is how long Adolph Fisher, <>f Zanesville, ()., suffered from piles. He was cured by using three boxes of De- Witt's Witch Hazel Salve. R C. Dod son. 45-ly Few women think themselves truly homely. Thousands of sufferers from grippe ( have been restored to health by One Minute Cough Cure. It quickly cures ; coughs, colds, bronchitis, pneumonia, grippe, asthma, and all throat and lung j diseases. R. C. Dodson. 45-ly What a lot of untidiness snuggles ! under a roll lop desk. The farmer, the mechanic and the ! bicycle riders are liable to unexpected j cuts and bruises. DeWitt's Witch Hazel I Salve is the best thing to keep on hand. It heals quickly and is a well known ! cure for piles. R. C. Dodson. 45-ly ' 'The root of the present war problem" said the mathematician, "is a Cuba | root." Children like it, it saves their lives. ] We mean One Minute Cough Cure, the I infallible remedy for coughs, colds, | croup, bronchitis, grippe, and all throat , and lung troubles. R. C. Dodson. 45iy | The news boys cannot complain that 1 the war scare injures their business. It is a great leap from the old fashion ■ ed doses of blue grass and nauseous physics to the pleasant little pills known as De Witt's Little Early Risers. They cure constipation, sick headache and biliousness. R. C. Dodson. 45-ly If persons turned out to be just as we expected them, would the world be better or worse ? A torpid liver robs you of ambition and ruins your health. DeWitt's Little Early Risers cleanse the liver, cure constipation and all stomach and liver troubles. R. C. Dodson. 45-ly To some people life seems to be one long protracted nap. The West field, Ind., Newn prints the : following in regard to an old resident of that place: "Frank McAvoy, for many years in the employ of the L. N. A. &C. Ry. here, says: I have used Chamberlain's Colic, Cholera and I Diarrhoea Remedy for ton years or longer—am never without it in my family. I consider it the best remedy of the kind manufactured. I take j pleasure in recommending it.' " It is a specific for all bowel disorders. For : sale by L. Taggart. may A woman rarely shows any mercy for a mouse in a trap. Are you lacking in strength and en- ; ergy ? Are you nervous, despondent, j irritable, bilious, constipated and gen- j erally run down in health? If so, your ' liver is torpid, and a few doses of j Ilerbine will cure. Ilerbine has no 1 equal as a health restorer. L. Tag- ! gart. Some women worry themselves gray j trying to look y«'Ung. I Wins on Merit. Laxa Tea, plain, simple, thorough in j its action, leaves no bad after effect as ' powerful drugs often do. Try it. Sold and (guaranteed by all druggists 10 and 25 cents. " 2-32-141y ' The road to success has few resting places along the route. , | It Was Painful. I But Warren's Corn Cure never fails. 1 j Sold and guaranteed by all druggists j at 15 cents a bottle. 2-32 14ly The strawberry box is built on the same old plan as in former seasons. Used for Generations. Herb teas have and will be used as a medicine. Laxa Tea, harmless, sure and thorough in its action, is guaran teed by all druggists. 10 and 25 cents per package. 2-32-141y The cup of sugar your neighbor re turns never seems half as large as the one she borrowed. What's Sn a Name. Comfort, ease and pleasure when ap plied to corn cure, Warren's is the one. It never fails, sold .ind guaranteed by all druggists at 15 cents per bottle. 2-32-11-ly. Cultivate a forgetting rather than too good a memory. The Trouble Over. A prominent man in town said the other day: "My wife has been wear ing out her life from the effects of dyspepsia, liver complaint and indi gestion. Her case baffled the skill of our best physicians. After using three packages of Beacon's Celery King for the Nerves she is almost entirely well." Keep your blood in a healthy condition by the use of this great vegetable com- ' pound. Call at R. C. Dodson, Empori um; Thos. A. Green, Johnsonburg; C. C. Craven, Sterling Run, sole agents and get a trial package free. Large sizes 50c. and 25c. 32-12-ly-2 Hurry and worry are boon compan- I i ions. A Horrible Railroad Accident Is a daily chronicle in our papers; I also the death of some dear friend, who had died with consumption, whereas, ! if he or she had taken Otto's Cure for j Throat and Lung diseases in time, life 1 would have been rendered long and I j perhaps saved. Heed the warning! j If you have a cough or any affection of the throat and lungs call at It. C. Dod ! son, Emporium; Thos. A. Green, John ! sonburg; C. C. Craven, Sterling Run, j sole agents and get a trial bottle free. Large sizes 50c. and 25c. 32-12-ly-2 j Klondike news is too tame these days. M. L. Yocum, Cameron, Pa., says: | "I was a sufferer for ten years, trying j most all kinds of pile remedies, but | without success. DeWitt's Witch i Hazel Salve was recommended to me. I • I used one box. It has affected a per- | manent cure." Asa permanent cure i I for piles DeWitt's Witch Hazel Salve has no equal. R. C. Dodson. 45-ly 1 A little boy asked for a bottle of "get 1 up in the morning as fastt as you can," 1 the druggist recognized a household 1 name for DeWitt's Little Early Risers, ' and gave him a bottle of those famous iittle pills for constipation, sick hcad ! ache, liver and stomach troubles. R. ; I C. Dodson. 45-ly Filmy fabrics dotted with coral will be in vogue this summer. So, also, , will coral lorgnettes. Schools closed, diphtheria epidemic, no public meetings—such reports are ' | never heard where the people use ! Armstrong's Diphtheria and Quinsy | Drops. It cures the most serious i throat disease or the slightest soreness. 1 | I have a few 10c. bottles, come and get ' J one while they last, it is worth trying. R.C. DODSON, THE Bfiicfcfist, EMPORIOI, PA. __ __ < f^r ! FOR BABY, older children, adults, and everyone, ' irrespective of age, the doctor must | prescribe and the druggist supply the j needful remedies. Experienced medi ] cal men very often express a desire to {have their medicines prepared by us. ! They appreciate the importance of pure drugs in the work of eradicating ] disease. Where health is involved one can't be too sure Our prescription I department is conducted on the rule ; of pure drugs properly dispensed. 5