8 -=r=. * hTt O a fl w g TRUSTWORTHY STORE.J i|| -; ! . fill U i P I I a I I'll SS P ii( :::; In , (••) fill U! <••) il C * #J 111l ( We are reeeiviag daily (•?! In Corsets >ve have the.l l'f ~ <••) J' |H new goods. £Jj IMj |> (••) I 1 'lii All tlic Leitcsf in R. &G. - j All tne NOVELTY $3 FEATHERBONE h] 1 AND 'J-- 1 pj GOODS, *. B. CYCLIST. (Ill; Li SILKS, <*•) __________ 11 " VELVETS. '•?' fll TRIMMINGS. MEN'S il ■7l LININGS. (••) SANITARY FLEECE if . ETC. UDERWEAR, [l JS SI.OO per Suit. 11l ri ! • J 'ill (••) };; ri . !iH' If ]l iji j . 11l I| r' l[ 11 — ' * i m■ i w i i i i ! 3c i { ' „} A Pull and Complete Line of j, J| | Ladies 1 , Misses, Childrens' and S [pi S S i ! ! S Gents' Fine Shoes. I Ij] j] i . m i]ii p m 1 d if iii raj 111 BALCOM & LLOYD. I U I' II Fourth Street. Emporium. Pa. || if tgf W W %* W Vf %if W Vf Wf %. if W ** w \Sf %if ** *» W ** V* VSf Wf \ 111 HIE MS!! 112 tru* Ik H h * Ww W * W Wf Wf W * . «112 W* W *Sf ** ** *SP *»F *»F KiflF ** w w ** % We extend our compliments to the citizens of j Cameron and adjoining counties for their rapidly and ■ increasing patronage. We would invite all to see , our large display of GENERAL HARDWARE and | BUILDERS' MATERIAL. We would call especial j i attention to our ill UK Iran I I!1^ ny art '°^ es ' - wcßwifflcE. what we have. We again desire to call attention to our OIL, and GAS STOVES. The Ladies delight. THE WELSBACH LIGHT. This popular light the great If gas saver, is growing in popular with our people. All who de sire to economize in gas | should use these burners. Call * % * nor xf w % * *sr ** w w m w m. * \if vst w ** nsf -w -wr d 112 vaf w w * j| at jut st at mat *. at *!k m jot *. •* mm. *& jax- j«k * v #&. as * g 111! HMD s to w w w » CAMERON COUNTY PRESS, THURSDAY, JUNE 16, 1898 Additional Local News. The following from the Erie Dispatch speaks the sentiments of a great many Pennsylvania Repub licans: Congressman Charles W. Stone, it is reported, is likely to be a candidate for United States Sena tor. As Mr. Quay some time ago announced that ho would retire from politics and would not again be a candidate for Senator, of course he is 110 longer to be looked upon as a factor, which should leave the northwestern part of the state, at least, quite free for Mr. Stone. But whatever the campaign may develop, Mr. Stone ought to be a strong candidate for the Sena torship. With an extended Con gressional experience, a liberal education in public affairs, high abilities as a speaker and debater, and of sterling character, his can didacy ought <0 stir up an enthusi asm calculated to make him one of the most popular candidates Penn sylvania can offer. Bucklen's Arnica Salve. The best Salve in the world for cuts, bruises, sores, ulcers, salt rheum, fever sores, tetter, chapped hands, chilblains, corns, and all skin eruptious, and posi tively cures piles, or no pay required. It is guaranteed to give perfect satis faction cr money refunded. Price 25 cer.ta a box. For sale by L. Taggart. v3l-n4O-ly Mason Mill Letter. Hurrah for the Fourth! We notice that William J. has adopt ed a son. Mr. Harry Williams visited home over Sunday. Mr. Rolla Ford was seen on our streets Sunday night. Mr. Lynch and son Albert passed over the Hill Saturday. Mr. Orla Miller, of Houston Hill, passed through here Sunday. Mrs. C. W. Williams and Mi6s Lizzie Jordon visited friends at Dents Run over Sunday. Mr. G. E. English, of this place, visited friends at Dents Run and Benezette, Saturday and Sunday. Huntley Miller, one of Mason Hill's affable young men, visited friends at Medix Run Saturday and Sunday. The home of Mr. and Mrs. Thomas Jordan was made exceedingly happy on Monday, June 6th, by the arrival of a bouncing baby boy. PEGOY. North Creek. Miss Edith Morton is on the sick list. M. E. Taylor is the happy father of ten pound boy. We have been having heavy thunder storms the past few days. Frank Smith, who has been ill for a number of months, is again able to be around. Miss Mabel Chadwick spent Satur day with her parents, Mr. .and Mrs. F. Mott. Ex-Commissioner A. C. Goodwin and wife were guests at Etihu Hous ler's last Friday. Elihu Housler who has been ill with heart trouble tor a number of weeks, still continues in about the same con dition. Miss Annie Carter, of Rich Valley, spent a couple of days in this place, guest of Miss Bernice Housler and her sister Miss Rose Carter. MUCH TALK. Informal Receipt. Uneducated peoplo sometimes have a happy knack in coming to the point. Here, for example, is a story from the Boston Herald: Dan and Mose, neither of them noted for erudition, wero partners in an enter prise which it is needless to specify. One morning a customer called to settle a small bill and after handing over tho money asked for a receipt. Moso retired to the privacy of au inner room and after a long delay re turned with a slip of paper, on which were written these words: "We've got our pay. Mo and Dan." A Chestnut. Ralph Waldo Emerson ouco told a good story of a friend who always car ried in his pocket a horse chestnut as a protection against rheumatism, just the same as other peoplo wear shields and other specifics. Emerson thus testifies to tho results in his friend's ease: "Ho has never had the rheumatism since ho began to carry it, and indeed it appears to have had a retrospective operation— for ho never had it before." A Clever Trick. It certainly looks like it, but there is really 110 trick about it. Anybody can try it who has lame back and weak kidneys, malaria or nervous troubles. We mean he can cure himself right away by taking Electric Bitters. This medicine tones up tho whole system, acts as a stimulant to liver and kid neys, is a blood purifier and nerve tonic. It cures constipation, headache, fainting spells, sleeplessness and mel ancholy. it is purely vegetable, a mild laxative and restores the system to its natural vigor. Try Electric Bitters and be convinced that they are a miracle worker. Every bottle guaranteed. Only 60c a bottie at L. Taggart's drug store. cr viMiißiiiiiini— ■■■■■■■■■■■■—— 'jHSaSHSH SHSESHSHSH SH 5^ | coiißm PRINTING I a and .ion cj in ru AT THIS OFFICE. 11J <2saE,HSHSEHHSHSHSESHSHS3^ CHINESE MEDICAL SCIENCE. flan Not Improved Any Since tlie Time of Confucian. Chinese surgeons should delight the heart of the American surgeon who is wedded to tho "ethics" of his profession. One of them wits called to attend a patient who had been hit with an arrow, which was sticking in the wound when the sur geon arrived. That gentleman tried to pull it out, but succeeded only in breaking it off, leaving the point in his patient's in terior. Then the surgeon declined to do anything more, saying that all ailmei.ts of the inner body were in the field of phy sicians and not of surgeons, and he stuck to it. The Chinese physician does not know enough to give him a headache. He has no curiosity and never peers into the inner life of a subject. He is content to practice medicine as his predecessors did, and in his science tho liver still is the seat of the soul, as it was in the days of Confucius. Therefore, from tho liver come all the no ble and generous sentiments that make life worth living, and no self respecting sur geon or physician would probe this seat of mystery rudely. Ideas of pleasure have their origin in the pit of the stomach. Naturally it would be impious to prod that place with knives, bo stomach troubles are treated with in cantations. The gall bladder is the place where a man keeps his courage, and tho head is a solid bone. These remarkable teachings havo been handed down through generations, and tho number of Chinese books on mcdieirc is astounding, but each book contents itself with repeating tho things that tho first Chinaman discovered, so they do not shed much light. Lancing is tho favored and, indeed, almost the only operation. A Chinaman thinks that he cannot get to heaven if his body is mutilated, and he will not let a surgeon cut pff even a little finger if ho can help it. The Chinese are not tho only people who object to amputation through religious scruples. Turks will endure anything rather than to be barred from paradise, which they know will happen if they ar rive at the gates in a cut up condition. In Burma a king died recently because he would not allow the touch of a surgical instrument to pollute his royal body.— New York Press. A CONFEDERATE CRUISER. The Amount Captured by One I'rlvateer In Kiglit MonttiH. Just what one little privateercan do has been revealed by tho short career of tho Confederate cruiser Shenandoah. She was actually cruising for tho destruction of Union property but eight months, and during thai, time sho captured and de stroyed vessels to the value of $1,200,000, and the United States had never been able to direct a blow against her. Sho had vis ited every ocean except tho Antarctic, cov ering a distance of 58,000 statute miles. She destroyed many whalers in tho Arctic ocean. It was there that the last gun for the southern cause was fired. It was fired from the deck of tho privateer cruiser Shenandoah by Commander James Iredell Waddell on June 22, 1805, just 71 days after tho surrender of Leo at Appomattox. Commander Waddell could not persuade himself to enter ;m American port and for some time aimlessly scoured the seas. In August, however, he spoke tho English ship Barracoota, bound from Fran cisco to Liverpool, and from her received conclusive evidence of the end of the war between the states. lie resolved to seek an English port, and so on Nov. 5 tho Shenandoah entered St. George's channel, having sailed 22,000 miles without seeing land. On Nov. 0 sho steamed up tho Mersey, and tho Confederate tlag having been hauled down by Commander Wad dell, ho sent a communication to Earl Rus sell, English minister of foreign affairs, placing his ship at tho disposal of tho Brit ish government. Through Earl Russell tho vessel was transferred to tho jurisdic tion of tho American minister, Charles Francis Adams, who caused her to bo con veyed to this country to he dismantled.— Altanta Constitution. Mr. Hrewgter'* Reply. The late Benjamin H. Brewster, Presi dent Arthur's attorney general, whose face was terribly disfigured by scars, was onco engaged in aease as attorney for tho Penn sylvania railroad, and the opposing coun sel in his closing speech made a most bru tal attack on him. "The dealings of the railroad," ho said, "aro as tortuous and twisted as the features of tho man who represented it." Mr. Brewster gave no outward sign that ho felt this cruel blow until he had finished his argument. Then ho said: "For tho first time in my life tho per sonal defect from which I suffer has been tho subject of public remark. I will tell you how I came by it. When I was 5 years of age, I was one day playing with a younger sister when she fell into an open grate where HEIIVOUS DEBILITY, YHT.LI, IVEAKSESS end Prostration from Over wcrl; or' other causes. Humphreys' Homeopathic Specific No. 28, in use overAO years, the only successful remedy. $1 per vial,or 5 vials and large vial powder,for $6 80! i l.y Driu'gldta, or sent pontpaid on receipt of prire. ULMt'lllth is* 31KL . CO., Cor. William h JohnHU. t New York WILUAMS'PH 9 (P taimsylJ"? A SURE RELIEF TO WOMAN for all troubles peculiar to her sex. fST'Serid by mail or Iroin our Agent. SI.OO per box. WILLIAMS MFG. CO., Props., CLEVELAND, OHIO, For sale by R C. Dodson. N mi in IKE IFII. ST. MARYS DRIVING PARK, ST. MARYS, PA. JULY 4, 5, 6, 7, 1898. 4 BIG DAYS 4 Allotted to the Grandest of American Sports. A MERRY RACE WAR. A CARNIVAL OF HIGH CLASS SPORT. KASI-: BALL.-ELK LEAGtE CiAIWES. RIDGWAY vs ST. MARYS, .... JULY 4th. JOHNSONBURG vs ST. MARYS, .... JULY sth. KANE vs ST. MARYS, JULY 6th. BSTGames called at 12:45 p. m. Races called at 2:00 p. m. OFFICIAL 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. §4OO 00 No. 5. 2:23 Class Trotting, ..... Purse, 400 00 WEDNESDAY, JULY 6th. No. 6. 2:19 Class Trotting, ..... Purse, $400.00 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. eSTExcursion Rates on all Railroads. Steam cars run direct to gates. For Programs and other information, address, WM. KAIL, Sec'v. St. Marys, Pa. Y A CRITI- CAL TYPEWRITER-USING PUBLIC IT IS < THE LEADER IN IMPROVEMENTS, THE MOST • DURA^^^C^E^ AND DAI^ Y H ° U - ' • The Smith Premier Btf. 300 Wood Street, Pittsburgh, Pa. ygTTTTTT: n EMPORIUM § 1 Bottlimj Worths v | S. D. McDONALD, Prop. N Near P. & E. I-Jepot, Emporium, Pa. JN BOTTLER AND SHIPPER OP @ s ROCHESTER |j LAGER ; BEER. Best brands of fa \ EXPORT. 'S M iljj Manufacturer of Soft Drinks and dealer in choice Wines and pure Liquors fcjj |( Having assumed the manage- H jS ment of this popular bottling □ xj establishment I desire to assure fj c the public that no pains will be j£ spared to keep only the best IN r goods and fill all the wants of Ns 2 my patrons. Private families fd jk served daily if desired. W n S. D. McDONALD. | X/; ry /// / / //:/ / v // / } The Plate to ISuv Cheap ) Mott's Nerverine Pills DEFORK AND AFTEIi USING. ga.ns of' cithci sex, such as Nervous Prostration, Failing 01 lost Manhood, Impotency, Nightly Emis sions, Youthful Errors, Mental worry, ex cessive use of Tobacco or Opium, whicfr lead to Consumption and Insanity. $I.0( per box by mail; 6 boxes for $5.00. MOTT'S CHEMICAL CO., Prop's, Clsveland, Ohio For sale by R. C. Dodson. 112 WORC^STERI 112 CORSETS I 7\s K Yo U R D E ALE R Fo R Th £ Mr