EMPORIUM MILLING COMPANY. PRICE LIST. Emporium, Pa., April 5, 1900. •NEMOPHILA, per sack #1 lit f Jraham ' 55 Kye •• 85 Huckwheat, " 75 Patent Meal.. " 45 Coarse Meal, per 1 10 Chop Feed " 1 1° i White Middlings. " 1 Hran,. '• 1 1(1 Corn, per bushel, White Oats, per bushel •"> Choice Clover Seed, T Choice Timothy Seed, j. A t Market Prices. Choice Millet Seed, Fancy Kentucky Blue Grass, I R.C. DODSON, THE Brucjcjist, KM S'OISIITM. S»A. IS LOCATED IN THE CORNER STORE. ; At Fourth and Chestnut Sts.. THE SPRING CHICKEN. There is no need of special remedies for young and healthy person. The spring chicken litis been noted for its unwisdom. If you would have health and keep it. you must be wise and prudent. When you have a symptom, <ro after it. Pre vent its developing. When you are \vell keep well. The only way you may is by having the best drugs at hand at all times. Lots of Easter egg coloring. Perfectly harmless. R. C. DODHON LOCA I„ DJiPA RTMENT. PERSONAL (iOSSIP. Contributions invited. That xohich you would ik n to sor in this department, let us know by pon a' card . or lettcr % personally. W. P. Lloyd returned Wednesday evening from a business trip to Buffalo. Associate Judge, John McDonald, of Driftwood, was a PRESS visitor on Monday. Judge Wykoif came up from Gibson on Tuesday and attended the county convention. C. I). Oysterlicut, of Ridgway, Elk Tanning Company's bark inspector, was in town on Monday. Master Mechanic G. M. Pott went to Lebanon last evening to visit his fam ily for a couple of days. Harry Moorehouse, of Pittsburg, is j visiting N. Seger and family in town, | and transacting business. John Cummerford was down from Elk county yesterday, rejoicing over the arrival of that big boy at his home. Hon. I. K. Hockley and wife went to Williamsport yesterday to visit their daughter before she starts for England. Msss Sadie Smith, who has been vis iting her home at Portville, N. Y., returned Friday evening, at her sister's Mrs. Seth J. Hackett. Postmaster Lewis, of Sterling Run, was in Emporium yesterday and paid the PRESS sanctum a visit, accom panied by postmaster Seger. W. T. McCloskey, who has been vis iting relatives and friends in Empor ium for several days, returned to Pittsburg Tuesday morning. Rev. Ebersole, of Sterling Run, who has returned from an extended visit to Canada, was shaking hands with Em porium friends yesterday. Sol. Ross, of Wharton, who has been suffering from a tumor for some time, underwent a successful operation for its removal last week by Drs. Knight and Ashcraft of this place.—Couders port Democrat. Miss Martha Kaye came up from Williamsport last Saturday to spend Sunday with her parents. She was ac companied by her cousin, J. Howard Kaye and Miss Rose Transeau. J. A. Muttersbaugh, Dr. V. K. Cor bet and D. J. Donahue, delegates in attendance at the Republican county convention, last Tuesday, were wel come callers at the PRESS office. Rev. Johnston preached his first ser mon in Austin on Sunday, and was greeted by a large congregation both morning and evening. Allen Bald win, of Emporium, was doing business in town Tuesday. Austin Autograph. J. L. Johnson and Archie McDonald of Emporium registered at the Ilorton house yesterday. Win. Law of Em porium, a popular engineer of the W. N. Y. & P., was in town between trains on Saturday morning last.—Port Alle gany Press. Miss Alice Wright, of Renovo, is the guest of T. P. More and wife. County Treasurer, C. M. Thomas, re turned yesterday from a business trip to Legonire, Pa. Stowe Barton appeared up town i Tuesday evening and informed his j friends that he had returned from that region from whence no traveler re | turns. Last Friday, Mrs. B. Coyle received ! a telegram conveying the sad intelli | gence that her sister, Mrs. Thos. Whit ton, who resided a Philipsburg, was dead. Mrs. C. immediately departed for Philipsburg, returning home last evening. Miss Nellie O'Day lias accepted a | position as clerk in one of the leading j stores in Emporium, where she will re | main during the summer months.— Kane Republican. The Republican is i in error. Miss O'Day is with J. S. | Douglas in Olean, but visited friends here en route to that place. C. W. Barr, a prominent lumberman i of Sterling Run, and Miss Addie Cole- I man, one of Renovo's most estimable J young ladies, were married last even i ing at the residence of Mr. and Mrs. J. j McCoy, West Fourth street, by Rev. j R. H. Colburn.—Tuesday's William | sport News. Thos. 11. Norris, Supt. of Portland Tannery, arrived in town Tuesday af ternoon and remained in town over night, guest of C. C. Fay and wife. His many Emporium friends were glad to meet him and extend congratula tions 011 that wonderful boy. Yc edi i tor was pleased to greet our esteemed ! friend, whose friendship we highly prize. M. W. Whiting, ofSterling Run, was in Emporium last Saturday and called to see the PRESS and square himself with the printer. Mr. Whiting is one of our most energetic lumbermen and is a member of the extensive lumber firm of Thomas & Whiting, engaged in business at the present time at Ligon ier, Pa. Mr. W. is a native of this county and his friends are pleased to see him prospering. What I)o You Earn ? It's what you save, not what you earn, that makes you rich. Riches ■amassed in haste will diminish; but these collected by hand and little by little will multiply. Every man or woman can save money if they will, by adopting some systematic method of laying aside each day or week a certain sum—ten cents each working day for five years would amount to §156,50. The loose change which many young men throw away care lessly, or worse, would often form the basis of a fortune and independence. It is by economy that the loaf is mul tiplied, little becomes much, scattered fragments grows to unity. It is not merely saving. It is the foresight and arrangement to lay aside a certain amount for a fixed purpose. "No summer but hath his winter. He never reaped comfort in adversity, That sowed it not in prosperity." Communities which live wholly from hand to mouth never make much progress. Savings mean power. Children should learn early in life the lessons of economy, they can more easily be learned if their savings are for a fixed or definite purpose. Emmanuel Church, Ciood Friday And Easter Notices. Good Friday services at 10 a. m.and 7:30 p. m. Easter-Day, 7:30 a. m. Holy Com munion, 11 a. m. morning prayer, Holy Communion and sermon. Smart's Te- Deum, Stainer's Anthem, "They Have Taken Away My Lord," and parts of : Tours' Service will be used. 7:30 p. m.: Evening Prayer and Sermon. The Sunday School Festival will be I hold at 4p. m. Hymns and carols will ' be sung, and the mite-boxes received. Easter-Monday. 7:30 p.m. Evening j Prayer. The annual parish meeting j for the election of Vestrymen will be | held immediately after. The new Vestry will meet in Mr. Green's office, on Wednesday, April 18, i at 3:30 p. m, Woman Arrested. Last Tuesday P. & E. Detective Joy I came to Emporium and arrested Mrs. Irve Parks, on the charge of stealing | goods, while clerking in Koser's store. |at Renovo. Sho was given a hearing j at Renovo and in default of bail, was ; committed to jail. "Stub" Swartwood, 1 of this place, who was mixed up in the j case, was arrested yesterday on a war | rant and held in §2OO bail—R. Warner J becoming his surety This morning | when the night watchman went to his J room to call him, he being employed at j Warner House bus driver, it was dis | covered that he had "skipped." An Old Relic. It. P. Bingman, who purchased the | side-liill land south of Emporium Furn ace, recently found a curiosity, while | clearing the land. Deposited in a hol low cherry tree he found an almanac of 1839, evidently placed there for safe keeping. The almanac is covered with linen and stitched with home-spun yarn. The old book was published by a Philadelphia firm. It is quite a curi osity. Who could have placed it there? 1 Will some of our oldest residents give us an idea. CAMERON COUNTY PRESvS, THURSDAY, APRIL 12, 1900. BRIEF HENTION. i Alumni Association will hold a ban [ quet this year. Prospects for the locating.of the Silk j Mill in Emporium are very favorable. Repairs were completed at the furn ace last Saturday and work resumed on Monday. Work has commenced at the coke ovens, there being now about ten or fifteen men employed. Mr. and Mrs. Edward Morse's infant daughter ELLA E., aged four weeks, died on Tuesday. The funeral took place yesterday afternoon, Rev. Rob ertson officiating. Emporium has more genuine measles to the square inch than any other town in the state. No home is in stvlo un less one or more members of the family are having a measley time. One of H. C. Crawford's houses, at Sizerville, occupied by John Norris, was destroyed by fire last Monday afternoon. No insurance. John Nor ris had just moved into the house and lost part of his furniture. A woman's idea of tact, says an ex change, is to kick her husband's feet under the table when they have com pany and she is afraid he is going to say something. As she does the same thing when she wishes to impress upon him that he is to "say no more about it,"the poor cuss is sometimes at a loss to understand the feetiographic signals. In a neighboring town a salvation army advertiser wrote on a billboard "What shall I do to bo saved?" A patent medicine man came along the next day and wrote underneath, "Take Carter's Little Liver Pills." Shortly afterward the salvation army man no ticed the sacriligious work of the medi cine man and printed below, "And prepare to meet thy God." An old lady over north recently achieved eminence by carrying a quart of pop corn to a donation party, and eating two plates of oysters, a pound of crackers, three slices of fruit cake, half a mince pie, and some apples, after which she was threatened with a "spasm," and in the effort to prevent it sacrificed all the wine there was in the house. She attends donations regularly and does a great deal for the church in that way.—Genesee Demo- j crat. Will Have Delightful Trip. Mr. and Mrs. William Howard, ac companied by Miss Ada Hockley, of Emporium, leave this morning for a summer's trip abroad. They will sail from New York Saturday on the Me nominee for London, where they will remain for a week or more before pro ceeding to Yorkshire. From there they will visit Scotland, Ireland and points in Belgium, Holland, Germany, France, Switzerland and Italy. They will also attend the Paris exposition. They ex pect to return home during September. I —To-Day's Bulletin. Easter Souvenirs. Everybody can have beautiful Easter j lilies next Sunday without charge, for the great "Philadelphia Sunday Press" announces that every reader of the Easter number will receive free a splendid picture of Easter lilies. The picture is by a famous artist in ten col ors and is 14x40 inches in size. It will not be creased by folding, so that every person who gets next Sunday's "Press" will get a perfect picture fit to adorn any home. And in addition to the picture there will be a finely illustrated booklet containing a remarkable love story—the kind you will sit up all night to read. This will also be free with next Sunday's "Press." Announce ment is made that the supply of pic tures and books is limited, hence it will be well to send in your order early. Why Towns Die. More towns die for the want of con fidence on the part of the business men and lack of public spirit than from the rivalry of neighboring towns or adverse surroundings. When a man in search of a home or business location goes to town and finds everything brimful of hope and enthusiasm over the pros pects of the place, and everybody at work to build up the town, lie soon be comes imbued with the spirit, and as a result he drives down his stake and goes to work with the same interest. When, however, he goes to a town and everybody expresses doubt and appre hension in the future prosperity of the place, moping about and indulging in imaginary evils which are likely to be fall the town, he naturally feels that it is no place for him, and at once shakes the dust from his feet, while he pulls with all possible speed for some other town. Consequently, try and make a live, enterprising, progressive town out of the one in which you live. When you are working or saying a good thing for your town you are accom ! plishing all the more for yourself.— i Westmoreland Democrat. CASTOR IA For Infants and Children. The Kind You Have Always Bought Signature of ~&y. SHSHSaSTHSHSHHHSTH SH 5"2 5^ j 1.1. MSB. | [jj 61 Fourth St., East, n] jjj NEAR ODD FELLOWS HALL. [0 Dry Goods Only, jjj ui m cj a 1 in Notwithstanding uj n) the general ad- [n j] vance in prices, Ijj which only ef- ru fccts the goods [}j bought this year, n] [jj 1900, we shall uj [u continue to sell b] goods bought m during 1899, at js Ijj OLD PRICES, ft b as long as they pi K last. [n We shall ])lace j{] [}| on the centre J{] fu counter, small u] p] lots of goods far 1/1 n] below cost, to ffi make room for spring stock. JI New goods here, nJ 3j and more coining. f! ( 10 ID. E. Olmsted, I Ci § K EMPORIUM, I*A. al HSaSHSESaSHSHSHSHSHSH^ 'Ji \ R. SEGER & SON, I FASIIIONAIILE J (9 o) {• 9) I INK 11 i I fiiste. I (• •) (• •) (• •) !• •; (• Next to Bank, Emporium, Pa. •) (• •) (• •< (« •) (• •) § New Spring I] % Styles ;] (• •> (• 9) (• •) (• Embracing everything 111 (• •> (a Clothing and Furnishing | C* M | (0 line now opened. | (a Nothing like it 5 (• . . 4 1 ( a ever seen in this <c (• a) (» county. ' ,* Call and see the new * I [J styles in Neckwear, Collars, etc. I® Wc are agents for *' jj THE | I! MAC HURDLE jj I: FULL DRESS li F: SHIRTS. :! i (• ® r* •) C* •) 1 ("• And call the attention i) (• •) (• of our customers •) I (• 9 i (• to this excellent •) . r# V ! (» line of wear. •) I r* Those who •) j (J desire a it) (• . , V | (0 lirst-class article •) (• , V 1 can now be 0) I J accommodated. (• •) 1 (• •) ; (• •) (• •) (o •) (• s ii R. SEGER & SON, 5 '• •) (■ •> !• •' (• Emporium, Pal •> '• •) •) • • • • • • • ® • s • • • •, i • i • •.5• S3 S,f) | ** r** I $2 EASTER EGGS, ipv A \/} r? EVERYTHING M 5« HAM S. DAY S Tu PLEASE Hi J* BACON. 1 *** THE PALATE. £* i iM N i Emporium's Pare Food Store. gig j We are putting forth extra effort to make our store the very jjf |jj best, at which to supply the varied cravings of the inner man. We jf* 5 £ make it our business to watch the markets and supply our patrons ft ff £* with all the luxuries—as fast as they come within our reach —as well £5 pn as the staples. You will do well to keep watch of us, especially at * % ft* this season of the year, when new goods are constantly making jj* N™~ their appearance H FRIDAY AND SATURDAY SPECIALS. ** "HAMBURG", champion of Eng- DAVIS' O. K. BAKING POW- £g « > land Peas, 12c: can, worth, 15c. DER, 18c lb. can, worth 20c. ** , IMPORTED MACCAROM, 12c Hf LARK SHORE TOMATOES, 9c lb. package, worth, 15c. 53 can, §I.OO doz, worth, §1.20. REG IN A BRAND, extra Select ELITE BRAND SALMON, 20c Cling Peaches, 20c can, *% can, worth 25c. Elite Salmon rmn !' v n'vnpvi \ r* H-j* • , i-i i i. GOOD (JA LI r UK-NIA rKi -S M isguarantocd to be equal to any ( ~% ]b ( < 00(l Vlllue !lt 7 e. N pjl put op on the Colombia River. II pure BUCKWHEAT FLOUB, -j% Mfcjß GRANULATED SUGAR, 6c lb. J 70c sack. 112 * 11 ** POTATOES, 50 CENTS A BUSHEL. Money back if any cause for die- |g "t £ satisfaction. ft $ x TRY JA-MA-KA COFFEE. il?3 The best for the money we ever tested, 20c lb. j i] l y || Telephone 6, Fourth St. *J» . Ma. aV + a. . 1000. 1000. SPRING OPENING furniture! We have been getting ready for this rare BEAUTY SHOW since fjij l last fall, to which all are invited, especially the critical eyes. jjP;', You all need new furniture to replace those old worn out ones and here is the PLACE to buy. Don't take our word for it, the [M;] /|fflj|| only way is to come in and see the I MOST POPULAR PRICED LINE OF FURNITURE li EVER OFFERED IN EMPORIUM. 'lit Gt'MlW 4 s P ace ' H crowded to its utmost capacity. m? } )l"** LINE is Larger, Better and is entirely NEW. v. We have the LARGEST display of FURNITURE in the county 1 Sand it is the BEST. ' ' : Peoples idea of BIvST is different. Placr ur goods beside (fjffijj others and you will say we have the BES r !§J If you like our BEST you buy. After yol d it, as we "Guar ||| antee" you keep on liking and we k four money. Not Wj: Iffi otherwise. !®| PJ|J All our Stock being strictly new and of the latest designs in Art 'M , Creations. This store is full of the newest and BEST goods and Mi Pji we respectfully invite you to see |jS|| SHHHSasrH SHSHSHSH S? SHSHSHSS 51^ nj Our Jiest J'arior Suites, ji »' n] Our Best Jiet}- ltoom Suites, [n Our Hest. Side Hoards, [jj uj Our Jiest Chiff'ionlers, nJ Our Jiest, Desha, [}j Our Jiest Booh ('uses, Lt] ru Our Jiest Joining Chairs, K [{] Our Jiest Dining Tables, [}j n] Our Jiest Couches, [JJ ifjjtjj Ln Our Jiest BaOi/ Carriages, nJ [}j Our Jiest Go-Carts, nJ [P Our Jiesi Mattresses, |{] if ;; [j! Our Jiest. Carpets, In nJ Our Jiest Matting, [n l; liockerH, j |j <SSHHHSHScLSESBSHHHSHSHSaSHSHSasaSHSHSS^ 1 Undertaking! fi Remember tlie place, next door to Otld ffhjj] Fellows Block. THE EMPORIUM FURNITURE Mill BERNARD EG-AN, Manager, ||j EMPORIUM. - - - I»A. I! j Wholesale Friees I A to Users. jla O r,r General Catalogue quotes g them. Send 15c to partly pay m ijs postage or exprcssage and we'll ■ M send you one. It has 11 00 pages, 8 p] _ 17.000 illustrations and quotes H V? , • uiijqt ' ~7~ ]>ric:es on nearly 70,000 things K ,-j . i I■ 1 that you eat and use and wear, gj |8 ' xVo constantly carry in stock all K n '' : articles quoted. 1 The Tallest Mercantile Building in the World, "/!ONTC E}?Y WAi?C & CO., ® Owned and Occupied Exclusively Cy Us. Mlihlfii A ■/.& Mu<il*.mSi., < iiii-na'>. H The Cameron County Press Is the best advertising medium in this section of the State; has a larger circulation than any other weekly paper pub in Western Pennsylvania. Rates given upon application. OUR JOB PRINTING Department is equipped with all the up-to-date styles of I type and first-class work can be done on short notice. 5
Significant historical Pennsylvania newspapers