8 /iF~T~_ ~ 0 a m I STORE.J i] i k M ' « r. I " "If - I | (••> fill ff| '••> Jjl 1 (••; ! ill (••) m <##) ii! 1.1 We are receiving daily (?•] In Corsets we have the ■ | * I (••) J ; [p new goods. g* | 1 j r!| All the Latest styles in »g SrSmUNERS i| i NOVELTY 55 FEMHERBONE (fjj | ; ' npccc (»»J AND if i GOOol. 55 "• »■ CVCLIST - 'I 111 SILKS, <••> 1 J ; .» VELVETS, 22 lij: fcl TRIMMINGS, MENS J=|| Efl LININGS, (••; SANITARY FLEECE jlj „1 ETC. <*2 UDERWEAR. If, i %% SI.OO per Suit. I. H » ■!8 ; 1 l 55 if 1 , I P 1 : 1 I Hi J i • I * 8 I _ u [| jjljj II A Pull and Complete Line of j| ! | I cj Ladies', Misses, Childrens' and S - j § Gents' Fine Shoes. L if if 1 I I ' 1 i I'l I BALCOM & LLOYD. 1 [jl Fourth Street, Emporium, Pa. J|: ywwwiarisPwwww'iiFwii.eFwiaFWWWiirwirwiiiFiirwwii I 111 111 HIE! i fc* * ***** -Mf %* w Tar x* \iF i«r imf mat *. if www w w nwr www w* * at am i«*t *st mrs isk an. *. tk nest xxt «t * • & *%. mt mt nt% m. at* *%. *%. m **■ * | We extend our compliments to the citizens of Cameron and adjoining counties for their rapidly and increasing patronage. We would invite all to see i our large display of GENERAL HARDWARE and BUILDERS' MATERIAL. We would call especial attention to our «... j We again desire to call attention to our OIL and GAS STOVES. The Ladies delight THE WELSBACH LIGHT. r<-™» This popular light the great d|h gas saver, is growing in popular with our people. All who de sire to economize in gas should use these burners. Call and see them. *H!» j lit m. *st ** t*t *.%. **k m. xst . \ *%. *&. at m. jsh m xtk **t 4*. m. * i 1118. Mi s a I jumtsit r.-tk jmMkMkMtk*******&****at* l CAMERON COUNTY PRESS, THURSDAY, JUNE 9, 1898. Pennsylvania History. In ii late Lewieburg News an un ! known writer over the signature of "I'ncle John" givea Home interesting facts about Pennsylvania, it.-; people and their unwritten history which are ) valuable and interesting to every in j habitant. This information is especi ally interesting to young people and should be read and remembered by all. Here it is: : Washington was first called the | "Father of his country" in Hardie's Remembrancer, published in Lancas ter. 1795. Sunday school tickets, red and blue, ! with scripture verses were first print ! Ed at Gerraantown, 1744. The first attempt at bibliography in ! America was by the Swenkfelders of ; Penna., about 1740. The most extensive literary aceom i plishment in America prior to the Revolution was the"Martyer Spiegel," j of 1500 pages, printed at Ephrata, I Lancaster Co. The most learned colonist of Ameri | ca was Daniel Pastorius, of German tow n ; who read and wrote German, i Spanish, English, French, Italian, 1 Greek and Latin. Peter Miller, a Pennsylvania Dutch j man, translated the Declaration of In i dependence into seven languages for the Continental Congress. It is ; thought he was the only American j then living able to do this. Prior to the Revolution there were j more printing presses in Pennsylvania I than in all other colonies combined. Prior to the Revolution more books had been printed by the Pennsylvania i Germans than in all New England and New York combined. More agricultural papers are taken in Pennsylvania than any other state in the Union. Pennsylvania had more newspapers before the Revolution than all New ; England. Pennsylvania has the richest agri cultural county (Lancaster), in the Union. The first protest against slavery from the colonies came from German town in 1688. In 1836 Gov. Ritter, ofPennsylvauia, was the only free state governor who in his annual message made a bold stand against slavery. See Whittier's poem. Pennsylvania first of all .the states voted money to put down the slave holder's rebellion the same day Fort Sumpter was fired upon. Pennsylvania sent the first troops to Washington in 1861. The first Normal school department in America established at Nazareth Hall 1807. The Pennsylvania Germans printed the bible three times before it was once printed in English. They printed the New Testament seven times before it was once printed in English. The first work of pedagogy was printed in Pennsylvania. The first American works 011 astrono my and music were printed in Penn sylvania. First yonng ladies seminary in United States established by Mora vians in 1749. In 1793 such a school was proposed at Plymouth, but pro posal was defeated because it was sug gested in such schools women might become more learned than their future husbands. The largest orphan school in the United States and best endowed is in Philadelphia. The first hospital, the first medical school and the first dispensary in America were established in Philadel phia. The first public medical library was established in Philadelphia. Lady teachers in schools of high grade first employed in Moravian schools of Penna. The first modern water works in America at Bethlehem. The first fire engine in America at Bethlehem. The first genological work done in America among the Moravians. First stereotyping in America was done in Pennsylvania, j The first printing in colors in Amer | ica was done in Philadelphia. The first medical man of the Revolu- I tion was Dr Benj. Rush, Philadelphia. The greatest surgeon of modern j times was Dr. Sam'l Gross, of Phila delphia. The Pennsylvania railroad is the best managed and greatest railroad in the world. Pennsylvania gave more men and more money to the war of 1815 than any other state. Massachusetts was at that time plotting secession and dis union, but the New England school histories do not tell of this. When, after the battle of Bull Run, the National capital was at the mercy of the confederates, Gov. Curtin sent the Pennsylvania Reserves, 16,000 strong, and Washington was saved. No other state had such a body of soldiers save Pennsylvania. Note this, my boys. When, in 1776, Washington's army had almost dwindled to nothing, here- j ceived 1500 recruits, every man of | them Pennsylvanians. These recruits j made Trenton and Princeton possible, I j and saved the Continental army. Note j jit boys. It is not in your history. At the Thermopylae of the American ! Revolution, the battle of Long Island, I ' the American Army was saved by the j Pennsylvania riflemen, under Col. J I John Peter Keehlein. These men j | stood their ground until ih some com ! panies 79 out of 100 were killed, and j j the rest of the army had completed its ! retreat. This is not in the histories, rny boys, because Bunker Hill and | Lexington used up all the space. When the army at Valley Forge i needed blankets, the Pennsylvania : farmer's wives furnished them. When Washington needed gold and j silver to hold his army together, nine j Pennsylvania Germans advanced SIOO,- j 000. Both in the Revolutionary war and ! in the great Rebellion, Pennsylvania j furished more men than any other state. Pennsylvania now appropriates ; more money from the public treasury j for public schools than any other state in the Union. Pennsylvania treated the Indians . within her borders more fairly than ! any other state. For sixty years she I had no Indian wars. Pennsylvania was the only colony j which offered the asylum to the op- j pressed of the old world. In Mass i- j | chusetts they hung or drove into I the wilderness to freeze and starve, j | Quakers, Baptists and other people ' ! who had ideas of their own. The first commodore in the Ameri- : can navy, John Barry, was a Pennsyl- j 1 vanian. The finances of the American wars 1 j have all been managed in Philadel- j ! phia, Robert Morris in the Revolution j I and Jay Cooke in 1861-65. Nine years previous to the outbreak j of witchcraft at Salem,Mass.,there was ! a trial in Philadelphia for this crime, ' but instead of hanging the poor I woman, as was later done in New • England, the jury promptly acquitted i her, and the judge severely reproved I her accuser. These things my boys, are not in ! your school history. That was writ i ten by a descendant of the Puritans, •! and he had so much to say about the . deeds of his own ancestors, that he had I no room in his book to say anything | about our ancestors. It is a shame • that you are compelled to use in school ' any book which is so narrow and partial I as your school history, but you will soon be a man, and then you can read other histories written by better and : wiser men, and then secure a true 1 idea of the history of your great State. UNCLE JOHN. Kindness draws out the better part 1 of our nature, disarming resistance, dissipating angry passion, and melting the hardest heart. When a man is a good item of news for a newspaper and then gets mad because it is published, he displays de cidedly poor judgment and ninety-nine times out of a hundred he is the fellow who would like to read that very same item in the paper if it was about an other fellow. The statistical report of the Grand Lodge of Odd Fellows at Wilkesbarre last week showed that the present membership in this State is 106,478. The sum paid for the relief of brothers, to widows, burying the dead and edu cation of orphans was $593,891.52. The assets of the Lodges amount to nearly $4,000,000. Jeremiah S. Whelan, who conducted a barbershop in Emporium some time ago, left this place and located at Buf falo. On Sunday last he went in bath ing in Buffalo creek; being a good swimmer he amused his companions with his skill until finally overcome with cramps he sank. His body was recovered later. A southerner and a soldier of the Confederacy, now living in lowa, ex pressed the sentiment of the South very plainly and tersely the other day when hestfid: "We couldn't lick the Yankees in 1861, and d—d if we'll let any one else lick 'em now." In putting down a new oil cloth re member it will last twice as long if you give it a thin coat of varnish and let it dry well befjre using. A little milk in i tepid water is excellent to wipe oil cloths or painted floors.—Ex. The editor of an exchange, while effervescing over the sweet girl gradu ade, declares that he would welcome j her with open arms. A married brother ' | newspaper man quoted his item, | adding: "We would be glad to do the | same thing if we were single." Bucklen s Arnica Salve.. j The best Salve in the world for cuts, ! bruises, sores, ulcers, salt rheum, fever - sores, tetter, chapped hands, chilblains, j corns, and all skin eruptions, and posi | tively cures piles, or no pay required. ; It is guaranteed to give perfect satis- j faction cr money refunded. Price 25 I j cents a box. For sale by L. Taggart. v3l-n4O-ly Low Rates Made by the Nickel Plate i Road. Only $11.85, Buffalo to Warsaw, Ind., j ; and return, every day to Sept, 15th. Only §36.20, Buffalo to Omaha and | return, every day, account Exposition. Only $35.55, from Buffalo to Dallas, Tex., and return, June 11 and 12, good j to return until June 28, account Mystic I Shrine, Only $8:20; Buffalo to Toledo and re j turn, June 15th and 16th, good to re turn until June 20th. Only sl4 50, Buffalo to Louisville and return, June 19th and 20th, good to return until June 26th. Only 57.00, Buffalo to Detroit and re turn, via Cleveland and boat, June 27 and 28th, returning until July 4th, account Knights of St. John. Only $19.25, Buffalo to Nashville, Tenn , and return, July 2nd, 3rd, 4th and sth, good returning until August Ist. Only $12.00, Buffalo to Chicago and return, July 12th and 13th, good to re turn until August 10th. j For information call 011 your nearest ticket agent, or address F. J. Mooro, I Gen'l Agent, Nickel Plate Road, 291 Main Street, Buffalo, N. Y. 36-15-4t. "BEFORE BABY IS BORN." ▲ Valuable Little Book of Interest to All Women Sent Free. Every woman looks forward with feel | ings of indescribable joy to the one mo ! mentous event of her life, compared with which all others pale into insignifi cance. How proud and happy she will be when her precious babe nestles 011 ! her breast how sweet the name of | "Mother!" And yet her happy antici pation of this event is clouded with misgivings of the pain and danger of the ordeal, so that it is impossible to avoid the feeling of constant dread which creeps over her. The danger and suffering attendant upon being a mother can be entirely prevented, so that the coming of the little stranger ; need not be looked forward to with fear and trembling, as is so often the case. Every woman who reads this paper can obtain absolutely free a val uable and attractive little book enti tled "Before Baby is Born," by sending her name and address to the Bradfield | Regulator Co., Atlanta, Ga. This book j contains priceless information to all ! women, and no one should fail to send | for it. Sympathetic fiusbanfls. The sympathetic tenderness of a lov ing husband is everything to an expec tant mother, especially during her first j ordeal. George Lay ton, Esq., a promi- | nent druggist of Dayton, 0., gives the j following case: A customer of mint, whose wife has aged four bottle* of Motner'a Friend " before con finement, My*, nftsr seeing the effects of the remedy, that If she had togo through the ordeal ngain.'and there were but four bottles on the market, and the cost was SIOO per bottle, she ' would have them. " Mother's Friend " is a scientifically | compounded liniment which affords cer tain relief in the various ailments pre ceding childbirth, and assures proper elasticity to the cords and muscles in volved in the final ordeal. "Mother's Friend" is sold by drug gists, or expressed on receipt of one dollar. Valuable book, " Before Baby 1j Born," mailed free on application. THE BRADFIELD REGULATOR CO.. Atlanta. Qa. HUMPHREYS) ciii i:s No. 1 Fever, Congestion. No. 2 Worms. No. 3 Infants' Diseases. No. 4 Diarrhew. No. 7 Coughs & Colds. No. 9 Headache. No. lO Dyspepsia, Indigestion. No. 11 Delayed Periods. No. 12 Leuchorrea. No. 13 Croup. No. 14 Skin Diseases. No. 18 Rheumatism. No. 19 Catarrh. No. 27 Kidney Diseases. No. 34-Sore Throat. No. 77 Grip & Hay Fever. Dr. Humphrey*' Ho meopathic Manual of , Diseases at your Driun i-t- or Mailed Free. ; Sold by druggist*. o' ■ '.ton receipt m&Vt-. ; 50.;tn or sl. Ilumpi'.n- ' Med. Co.,Cor. William and John Stß.. New Yo: k . Pk R S l"0 Ur Williams' Indian Pile ■I I jL v. ill cure Blind. ! E D 9 IbPUcs. Ii absorbs t.Ue tumors. h 8_ allays the licking at once, acts ■ liof. i)r. Williams' Indian Pile Oint- j ™ ment is prepared for Piles and Itch ing of the private parts. Every box is warranted. By druggists, by mail on re ceipt of price. .">0 cents and #I.OO. U/IIUIMS MANUFACTURING CO.. Props., Cleveland." Ohio. | For sale by 11 C. Dodson. 11l I Mill Ml ST. MARYS DRIVING PARK. ST. MARYS, FA. JULY 4, 5, 6, 7, 8 898. 4 BIG BAYS 4 Allotted to the Grandest of American Sports. A MERRY RACE WAR. A CARNIVAL OF HIGH CLASS SPORT. BASK BALL.—ELK LEAGUE UAKIES. RIDGWAY vs ST. MARYS, JULY 4th. JOHNSONBURG vs ST. MARYS, .... JULY sth. KANE vs ST. MARYS, JULY Oth. JE&ii!r Games called at 12:45 p. m. JES*®" 1 Races called at 2:00 p. m. SCHEDULE. MONDAY, JULY 4th. No. 1. 2:27 Class Trotting, ..... Purse, §400.00 No. 2. 2:16 Class Pacing and 2:14 Class Trotting, - - Purse, 400.00 No. 3. 2:40 Class Pace, ... . Purse, 400.00 TUESDAY, JULY sth. No. 4. 2:37 Class Trotting, ..... Purse, §400.00 No. 5. 2:23 Class Trotting, ..... Purse, 400.00 WEDNESDAY, JULY 6th. No. 6. 2:19 Class Trotting, ..... Purse, §4OO 00 No. 7. 2:20 Class Pacing, - ... Purse. 400.00 THURSDAY, JULY 7th. No. 8. 2:29 Class Pacing, ..... Purse, §400.00 No. 9. Free-for all—Trot or Pace, .... Purse, 400.00 Entries Close June 27th. tifrjf" Excursion Rats;s on all Railroads. Steam cars run direct to gates. For Programs and other information, address, >V2W. KALI., Sec'» St. Marys, Pa. EVERY REQUIREMENT OF A CRITI- | CAL TYPEWRITER-USING PUBLIC. IT IS | THE LEADER IN IMPROVEMENTS, THE MOST | DURABLE AND Smith Co., Btf. 300 Wood Street, Pittsburgh, Pa. vrm S EMPORIUM § BoUlimj Worlds | |j s. I). MCDONALD, Prop. N N Near P. & E. Depot, Emporium, Pa. CI |j BOTTLER AND SHIPPER OF g < ROCHESTER N w LAGER £ BEER. | Rest brands of fj | EXPORT. 1 N ui |ln Manufacturer of Soft Drinks ami dealer SI l in choice Wines and pure Liquors iH I y Having assumed the manage- [1 j jy ment of this popular bottling uj I 1 establishment I desire to assure $ the public that no pains will be re spared to keep only the best Wj goods and fill all the wants of ra my patrons. Private families m served daily if desired. N s. o. MCDONALD. 9 ! 112 / /•/.? /■ / /.M/ A/J ! (n I*p TO DATK M | COMMERCIAL PRINTING I pj AND JOB In Ln ru AT THIS OFFICE. UJF S The Place to Boy Cheap ) ? J. F. PARSONS. ? MOTT'S PENNYROYAL PILLS They overcome Weakness, lrrepru larltv and omliisions.increase vigor and Lanlßh "pain* of menstrua tion." They are "l*tfe Muvert" to girls at womanhood, aiding de velopment of organs and body. No . known remedy for women equals them. Cannot do harm—life be a pleasure. HI per box mall. Mold by drugglati. -Wrr' itfOTT CHEMICAL For sale by R. C. Dodson. i jpp^lgil 0- ROYAL I WORCESTER | { CORSETS j | SAIEBY AUJM