4 ?!>arr)eror) Gour)ly press. I ESTABLISHED BY C. B. OOULD. HENRY H. MULLIN, Editor ami Manager. ITIUJISH ED EVKRY THURSDAY. J TERMSOF SUBSCRIPTION: fer year 00 ,1" paid in advance $1 50 ADVERTISING RATES. Advertisements are published at the rate of one Aollur per square for onelnsertion andfiftyceuts •or square for each subsequent insertion. ' Rates by the year or for six or threemonths are J and uniform, and will be furnished on appli- | ration. 1-i. nal and Official Advertising per square, three imtsor less,s2 00; each subsequent msertionSO tents per square. Local notices ten cent spc-r line for one insertion, Ive cents per line for each subsequent consecutive Dcertion. Obituary notices over five lines, ten cents per inc. Siniplcannouncemetit sof births, marriages mil deaths will be inserted free. Hus: :i -8 Cards, live line* or less ?">.OS per year , »cr live lines, at the regular rates of advertising , Nolocalinserted for less than 75 cts.per issue, j JOB PRINTING. The Job department of the Piticss is complete, ! •aid affords facilities for doinßthe best class ol TOrk. PARTICULAR ATTENTION PAID TO LttW j Srintini:. No paper will be discontinued until arrearages ire paid, except at the option ofthe publisher. i Papers sent out ofthe county must be paid for a advance. REPUBLICAN NOMINATIONS. For Auditor General, EDMUND B. HARDENBERGU. of Wayne. C'ongress-at-Large, GALUSHA A. GROW, of Susquahanna. SOBERT 11. FOERDERER, of Philadelphia. Congress, JOSEPH C. SIBLEY, of Venango. COUNTY ORGANIZATION. B. W. GREEN, Esq., Chairman, i C. BI.UM, Esq., Secretary, EDITORIAL HENTION. Our total foreign trade this fiscal year is likely to exceed two and a quarter billion dollars. Kansas has experienced a few I oydones, but they were not all ol' sufficient severity to offset the pros perity now raging in the state. Middle-of-the-road Populism pos sese.s tlie courage of its convic tions. I Jut the other variety pos sesses the falcutv of political dick ering. Pettigrewism is the running aaate of pessimism,and Tillraanism > hooked up with tiffishness. The iaee of Democratic leadership is joiutantly turned gloom ward. When Kansas City convention de nounces trusts the Tammany dele gation will ask for a special dispen sation in favor of its ice combine. Indications are that our total foreign trade for the fiscal year, Gliding June *>o next will be s:>oo,- ; K)0,000 larger than in the year Muling June .'>(•, 1 Wt have imported 870,000,000 4"or(h more free goods this fiscal year, up to April 30, than in the corresponding ten months of the hist fiscal year. the Illinois Republicans have ruined a large batch of Democratic expectations by holding a harmon ious < (invention and placing an ex cellent ticket in the field. The in dications are that this is going to he a record breaking year for Democratic disappointment. Birmingham is shipping three train loads of pig iron per day to New Orleans, where it is loaded on ■:> ssels for the foreign trade. This in a measure accounts for the ex pansion sentiment in Alabama. The only regret in tliis connection : foil ml in the faci that the output >i I lie nirmingham furnaces is car led abroad in foreign bottoms. Republican- are willing that the f < nited States (Jovernment should ntribute to the upbuilding of an American merchant marine, so ti .it the ship.- employed in doing our import and export carrying ccin\ be built by Americans in our &oiue shipyards. Democrats on she other hand, favor the purchase of ships built abroad by aliens, 112 hielly ilie English. \n Epidemic of Whooping Cough. Jjjtcit winter daring an epidemic of i whui>p?og cough my children contracted ' the disease, having severe coughing spells. We had used Ohuml r!ain s ('oujdi Rein- ] jti*« very successfully I' .'croup and natur- | ally .- irncd to it at that time and found it j relieved the couidi ; : 1 effected a corn- ! pjete cure. —JonN E. CLIFFORD, Pro- 1 i,ii. tor Norwm. 1I! .a* X«.r-.000 X. \. j This remedy is for sal* y !,. Taggart. mar • POINTED COnnENT. The policy of condensed American | ism is not making any perceptible gains. t t + + The wage-raising employers are also 1 raising Cain with the Democratic plat j form-makers. t + + + The per capita circulation is now $26.58. This is another Democratic prediction destroyer. + + + + The Hon. Arthur Sewall is going abroad this year in preference to going on the Chicago platform again. + + + + In addition to its other troubles the Democratic party now has a severe case of bifurcated Populism on its hands. + t ! Abdul Hamid shows a disposition to I join Aguinaldo in holding out in the i hope of Democratic success in Novem- I ber. A Republican platform will fit any ! State in the Union. A Democratic j platform would be embarrassing if it | were to stray over a State line. + + During the ten months of the current | fiscal year ending with April 30. our i exports were §135,918,857 greater in j value than in the corresponding months ! a year ago. + + The scarcity of issues for Democratic campaigning is shown in the eagerness of the leaders of that party to lug in the South African war and other foreign questions. -f + + The Republican party has always de pended upon commercial tranquility and prosperity for its success. Demo j cratic hope is founded upon strikes and j business depression. + 112 In April we exported $13,485,765 more i than we imported, and we exported I $30,130,000 more of American products j and manufactures than in April, 1899. ! Expansion still continues. The Virginia Democrats didn't do a particularly bright thing when they hissed Admiral Dewey. The Demo cratic party is not so heavily stocked with heroes that it can afford to hiss them. + + The Kentucky Democrats are clam oring for the election of United States Senators by the direct votes of the peo ple. At the same time they are com mitted to the policy of electing gover nors by the skullduggery of partisan legislatures. Secretary Hay quickly made it clear to the Boer envoys that the Adminis tration could not do more than it al ready has done to bring about peace in South Africa. The United States Gov ernment acted promptly when an op portunity offered, through the appeal mado to the representatives of the various nations at Pretoria, and was the only nation which did act. As its oflVr of mediation was then courteously declined by England no further oppor tunity is now afforded. Democrats who are so eager to show their hostility to Great Britian by try ing to involve the United States in a war with that country on account of the Boers in South Africa, are at the same time doing their utmost to secure the passage of an act of Congress that would permit British-built ships to be registered as American. Democratic preaching is different from Democratic practice. -»■ + While interested in watching the contest between the two German steam ship lines as to which shall build the biggest and the fastest steamship for their trade with the United States, the American people should not forget that they are paying the bills. If we did our duty to our country we would be building those ships in the United States, and manning them with our own citizens, as the shipping bill, still unacted upon in Congress, provides. Protection has built up the great land industries of the United States until they are able to make the country un precedentedly prosperous. Free trade upon the sea has so decimated our shipping during the same time, that we have but one-third as much tonage un der our flag to-day as we had forty years ago, although our commerce is four times as great now as it was then. The shipping bill, now pending in Congress, would, if adopted, change all this. At last the truth is out. A private letter from Porto Rico says that every body there is pleased with the new tariff' except one man. That man is the j British consul at San Juan, Mr. Finley, ! who had bought up all the sugar and | tobacco in sight, anticipating its free I entrance into the United States. No j wonder the Democrats in Congress i were BO anxious for a free trade with ; Porto Rico! They were up to their old j tricks of trying to fling the benefits of j the American market into the laps of ' the British, just as they did by the ! Wilson bill. Subscribe for the PRESS. CAMERON COUNTY PRESS, THURSDAY, MAY, 31 1900. MEMORIAL SERVICES Continued from Ist page. way we must not forget has added its contingent to the list of heroes who have died in the nation's battles—has marked the beginning of a new era in our internal history; for it lias demon strated the unfeigned loyalty of the Southjto country's flag. Its people have not, indeed, as a matter of sentiment, repudiated the cause for which they fought in the Civil War. It would be asking too much of human nature to expect that. But all the more we must admire and commend the strong, man ly, good sense which leads them to re gard their cause, however just from their point of view, as irrevocably lost and buried, and to turn their faces res olutely to the present and future, ac cepting cheerfully their destiny as citizens of the great republic. They have given ample proof that they have accepted the nation's flag as their own, and that Southern swords will leap as quickly from their scabbards, as will the swords of the North, when that glorious Hag is assailed. It is therefore in no sectional spirit that we glorify the cause for which you fought, and for which so many of your comrades laid down their lives. Much less do we glorify that cause in any spirit of political partisanship. No political party has a monopoly of virtue and patriotism. The cause for which you fought was not the cause of a party; it was the cause of the nat.on. No political party is divine; but the nation, we hold, is divine. And the noble man and great statesman who stood at the head of the govern ment during that fearful crisis, whose spirit inspired and dominated, whose wisdom guided,whose strength upheld, tiie nation —-his name is the heritage, not of a party alone, but much more of the nation. With this much of explanation we need not make any apology for calling attention to something of the higher meaning of the victory which you helped to win, in the most momentous strife of the century. In most of the war songs which had their birth during the period of the Civil War, the dominant note is tiie note of freedom. In "Marching Through Georgia," in "Rally Hound the Flag," and in the "Battle Hymn of the Republic," it isthenoteof freedom that gives these songs their life and power of inspiration. "As Christ died to make men holy, let us die to make them free." And yet, the war, as fought by the North, was not ostensi bly or primarily a war for liberty. Rather it was the South that was pro fessedly fighting for liberty. The Southerners asserted their independ ence of the Federal Government and Constitution, and they fought to estab lish it. They thought that their cause was the same sacred cause for which the fathers of the Revolution had con tended in 177(». Our sympathies natur ally go out to a people numerically weak and of limited resources, who make a heroic struggle for independ ence in the face of overwhelming odds. That is one reason why public senti ment in England was to a great extent on the side of the South during the Civil War. Why should the liberty loving people of the North have resist ed the demands of the South? And how came it that the people of the North, in compelling the South to re turn into the Union, should have been inspired with the feeling and convic tion, that instead of destroying free dom, they were actually lighting to maintain and spread the cause of free dom? How could those whom the South denounced as tyrants and op pressors, make use of the name of Freedom as their rallying battle cry? From the point of view of our tradi tional love of independence and liberty there was much to bo said 011 the side of the seceding states. They could point to the undoubted fact that the Union of 1757 was formed through the free and unforced consent of the states which entered the union. When the Union was first established, it was gen erally understood as being of the na ture of a confederation or partnership. None of the thirteen states were forced into it; none entered it until they were quite ready to do so. This partnership, -aid the South, was for the mutual ben efit of the parties contracting it, and if ever the time should come when any of the parties to the compact should become dissatisfied with the arrange ment, they had a perfect and sovereign right to withdraw from it. It is doubt ful if any person in 1787 would have called such a statement into question. Had any of the states chosen to remain outside the Constitution, there would have been no attempt 011 the part of the other states to compel them to en ter the Union; or had any of the states attempted to withdraw from the Union during the first few years after the adoption of 1 he < it is more than probable that no forcible opposi tion would have been made to the .'it tempt. The whole tendency of the eighteenth century was to emphasize the liberty an 1 independence of men, rather than the right of governments to coerce men against their wills. The war for independence was a war to throw off a tyrannous yoke, and there was not behind that war any conscious purpose to establish a new yoke in tiie sense of a federal government which should be compulsory upon all. The prevailing political theory of that time was Rousseau's theory of the social contract, the theory that men in an ideal state of nature are not subject to government at all; that each man by nature is absolutely free and independ ent; but inasmuch as men cannot live together in society without a collision of their rights and interests, it becomes necessary, or highly convenient, for them to surrender a part of their rights, for the sake of getting along smoothly together; aiuf ■> lawsandgovernments come into existence, which are thus the result of men getting together and agreeing to live under a more or less widely extended private agreement of their own making. Thistheorv taught that a government is only a partner ship arrangement, and that those living under it can abolish it at any time, and all go back to a primitive state of na ture, whatever such a procedure might mean. To a thorough-going advocate of this theory there could be 110 such thing as loyalty to a nation in the tru est sense of the word. Loyalty with him would be nothing more than keep ing faith with a contract or promise. If he saw fit, he could at any time give notice that lie would terminate his connection with the partnership. Rousseau's theory was everywhere 111 the air in the last half of the eighteenth century. Franklin, who spent much time in France, must have been influ enced by it; and Thomas Jefferson was an avowed advocate of it. The result of the Union under the Constitution was generally understood at the time to be a confederation rather than a nation. The peculiar name, or rather designation, of our country—the Unit ed States —seems to show this. When in the preamble to the Constitution it is stated that the Constitution is or dained and established by the people of the United States, it was generally understood then as meaning, not the people of the nation as a whole, but the people of the separate states. There was thus from the time of the adoption of the Constitution an appar ent presumption in favor of the doe trine of state sovereignty, since the states were the units which voluntarily entered the Union and ratified the Constitution. And the right to secede was a corollary of the doctrine of state sovereignty. If the Constitution did not become binding upon a state until it had of its own unforced choice rati fied and accepted it; surely, had not that same state a right at any time to give notice of a dissolution of the com pact? This was the legal theory upon which the secession movement of 1860-1 was based, it was a most plausible theory; it appealed strongly to the hu man love of liberty and independence; and when the issue first arose, the friends of the Union were at a hard loss to answer the arguments of the champions of secession and states' rights. But time, and the spirit of progress, and a higher constitution, a constitu tion not made with hands, were all against the theory of the South. "The very stars in their courses fought against Sisera." If human society were but an artificial structure, if in stitutions of law and government rest upon no other foundation than the ar bitrary will of men, if the states of the Union were only so many lifeless sticks held together in a bundle by an exter nal band; then, indeed, there would have been no ground upon which to resist the claims of secession. But the Union, whatever may have been the thought of those immediately con cerned in the adoption of the Constitu tion, was not an artificial structure; it was a living organism. It was not a house built with hands, the stones and timbers of which were putin place by human hands, and which human hands could therefore take apart at any time; it was a living temple, the result of living growth, and not of artificial con struct ion. Just as the rite of marriage is not the artificial creation of a rela tionship, but is the solemnization of a union already made by the divine laws of nature; so the adoption of the Con stitution was not the artificial creation of a union between the states, but was simply the formal consumation of a union already existing in the nature of things. The Constitution was no more the effective bond between the states than is the splint the effective bond which holds a grafted branch to the tree, or than is the surgeon's thread the effective bond which heals a gap ing wound. Had the states been mere dead sticks, held together by an ex ternal band, the removal of this band could at any time let the sticks fall apart; but the Union was of such a na ture that the members of it could no more fall apart thus than could the living branches of a tree fall away when the splints which once held the grafts in place are removed. To break up the Union it would bo necessary, not merely to undo what man once had done, but to undo also what the forces of living growth had done; in other words, what God had done. Al though the marriage relationship is one into which men and women may enter voluntarily and unforced, yet it is a relationship which God Himself, and not man, has made, and from which men and women may not volun tarily depart when fancy may seize them or convenience may dictate. What God hath joined together let no man put asunder. Equally sacred was the union of states, for it was the work of God; those who sought to sever its bonds were seeking to put asunder what God had joined together. Just as the marriage relationship becomes in time the foundation and center of other relationships, relationships which imperatively demand the sacred per manence of the marriage bond, out of which they have grown; so out of the Union of 1787 there had grown a vast and complex set of institutions and re lationships, new states, for instance, not adopted into the Union from with out but born and brought up within the bonds of the Union, just as children are born and brought up within the family; a vast network of social and industrial relations, binding the people of the several states into one great commonwealth —all of which implied and demanded the sacred perpetuity of the Union, and the permanence of the nation as a nation. The fundamental error of secession lay in the failure to recognize that the Union does not be long to that lower class of compacts, like business partnerships, which may be terminated and dissolved at the con venience of one of the parties to it; but that it belongs tot hot higher class of compact like the marriage bond, which man did not make and which he has no right to unmake. Titus,the can ;e of the Union was the cause o ' a .- acred and divine institu tion. ft was the principle that this people is a nation; and that the Union lias its root, not in the sufferance of tiie units which compose it, but in the laws of nature and of God; the princi ple thai if we shall trace the nation to its roots we shall find that it is im planted in heaven. And so we may set; a fitness in adapting to this prin ciple the words of St. Paul in our text: "Our citizenship -our commonwealth —is in heaven." Tiie conception of the nation as a living organism which must be pre served inviolate from dismemberment, will solve for us the strange paradox of the North shouting the battle-cry of Freedom, as it went forth to reduce the South to subjection. In a living organism, the well-being of each part, as well as of the whole, demands the subordination of each member to its proper place in the whole. In the human body, for instance, the body is nothing without its members, and, 011 the other hand, the members are nothing if servered from the body. If the hand should preversely complain of its limitations, if it should complain 1 a.- : its freedom of action is restricted b-- 'cause it is attached to the body, and it must move about with the body and minister to the body; and if it should thereupon seek to sever its connection with the body; would it really find freedom thereby ? It would find that the freedom of separation and isolation is the freedom of death It would certainly bring death to it self, and its loss would horribly maim, if not kill, the body from which it had separated itself. The well-being, the life, the true freedom, of the body and all its members, are inseparably bound up together. If one of the members suffers, all the members, yes, and the body as a whole, suffer with it. The hand is freest and healthiest, when it is in most vital connection with the body, and most faithfully serves the body, and is in turn nour ished and strengthened by the life cur rents which pulse through it from the body. Liberty and union are indeed one and inseparable. It was a true in stinct, therefore, which led the North to think of the nation's cause as the cause of freedom. Perhaps this was owing somewhat to the fear of an in vasion of the North by the Southern armies; it certainly was owing in no inconsiderable degree to the anti slavery sentiment of the North; but back of all it was due to the instinct ive conviction that the cause of the Union and the cause of freedom are at bottom the same. Freedom does not lie in the path of isolation, it does not lie in the path of separateness, it does not lie in the path of a blind and head strong desire for independence. It lies in the path of organic union, j and in the harmonious co-operation of every one of the parts with the whole I organism. Every being is free, only so long as it continues in the place which God has marked out for it. A bird of the air is not free in the water; neither is a fish free in the air. A lo comotive might complain because its movement is restricted to the rails on which it runs; but let it escape from the rails, and let it bump over ties and rocks, and it will quickly find that its new-found freedom is only freedom to wreck itself. It was the instinctive conviction that the destruction of the Union meant the destruction of liberty that caused the North to fight the na tion's battles to the rallying-cry of freedom. What higher type of loyalty and patriotism can exist than that inspired by a conviction of the divine origin and nature of the nation ? This kind of loyalty is not called forth by a busi ness partnership, however extensive. Monarchists, especially those who be lieve in the divine right of kings, claim a monopoly of the sentiment of true loyalty. A lady who was a monarchi cal enthusiast once said to me, "I could never in the world be an Ameri can; you are a people without a mon arch; you have no one to whom to be loyal!" But the truth is that there is 110 people 011 the earth that knows a deeper, truer, or purer sense of loyalty than clo Americans. The only true object of patriotic loyalty, whether in monarchy or republic, is the nation it self; and" that sentiment is truly felt wherever it is recognized that the na tion itself is a divine institution. And if loyalty of a more concrete and personal kind be demanded, rev erance and loyalty for a personality as the representative and embodiment of the nation's life;we are lacking neither in that. The regard of Americans for their chief magistrates is quite as pro found and genuine, though not per haps so marked in outward ways, as is the regard which monarchists feel to wards their sovreigns. And in our roll of immortals there are names which we cherish as sacredly as do others cherish the memories of those kings called Great or Good. We shall make mention of but one such name— the name of Abraham Lincoln, since he was the President during the per iod of the Civil War, and since he was in a superlative degree the embodi ment of those conceptions and senti ments which have made America great and noble He it was whose whole soul thrilled with a deep sense of the sacred nature and origin of the nation. His personality, great beyond the measure of common minds, the embodiment of clear-sighted vision of what the nation really is and is meant to be, the embodiment of the most pro found reverence and loyalty for the nation, and of the most devoted con secration to the nation's service—his personality and life was the chief in strument chosen of God to bring the nation to a true and full consciousness of itself. A double crown of glory he wears, as the saviour and uplifter of his nation, and the emancipator of a subject race. In saying all these things about the cause for which you fought, and about your leader in that struggle, I have had constantly in mind the conviction that these are practically the same principles which lie at the foun dation of religion as well as of true patriotism. I have tried to point out that your course was the na tion itself, which is a living organism, fashioned of God, and not of man; the living temple wherein dwelleth free dom; and the spirit of which was re vealed tous and entered into 11s large ly through tii:' character and example of one givat, personality. There is a parallel between this and the Gospel of Christ, whose minister lam. That Gospel is the Gospel of a Heavenly Nation, which is called in the New Testament the Kingdom of God. St. Paul calls it a commonwealth in Heav en; Christian men have sometimes called ib she republic of God. This Heavenly Nation has its earthly repre sentative and embodiment in the Christian Church. This Heavenly Kingdom is a nation which infinitely transcends the highest glories of the greatest nations of the earth. It is no mere dream of fancy; it is no mere fig ure of speech. It is real; it is substan tial; it is an organism which embraces the realm of spirit, and it is tiie sphere within which alone the divine spirit of man can find life. It is our home, it is the city where we belong; it is the or ganism from whence flow all the cur rents of spiritual life. Within that kingdom we have life; cut off from it our life must perish, and our strength decay. Freedom does not lie in iso- j lated independence of that glorious kingdom; it is in vain we utter our puny declarations of independence, ; and say that our religion is our own ! exclusive individual business, and that j we will be the head of our own little church. Isolation from the Kingdom i of the Spirit means death and slavery; ! but surrender to Clod, perfect, whole hearted subordination to our true place in that kingdom of God, means free dom and life. The service of God la perfect freedom; but secessson from the Kingdom of Heaven, self-willed revolt against God, will land us in the weakness and slavery of death. And it is through a personality that we realize this kingdom of Heaven, and enter into it. It is the Kingdom of God, but a God with a human heart, and with a human experience; and so that glorious kingdom is Christ's king dom. What Lincoln was to us as the interpreter of the nation, and as our leader into the true life of the nation; that, in an infinitely higher degree, in an unspeakable higher degree, is Christ to us, as the interpreter and revealer of the Heavenly Kingdom and as our Leader into its life. He whose ascen sion from earth we at this season com memorate is the great Personality and Power which fills and dominates the unseen world, that realm of the etern al realities, that realm which is the seat and source of all life; out of which we have come, and back to which it is our destiny to return. It is impossible to separate between the Kingdom of Heaven, and Christ, who is the Life and Soul of that Kingdom. We can not separate between loyalty to that Heavenly Nation, and loyalty to Him in whose character and life is realized the fulness of the life of that King dom. And since there is such a striking parallel between the cause of the nation for which you fought, and the cause of Christ; is it not reasonable to infer that the same divine power has inspired both. And ought not every soldier of the nation to be also a faith ful soldier of Christ, as loyal to the nation in Heaven as to the nation on earth ? And if we prize union in the earthly nation, should we not equally prize union in the Heavenly nation ? Does not the same logic which points to the unity of the nation, point also to the unity of the Church? It would be strange indeed if the same patriots who fought so bravely that the nation might not be rent asunder, should view with complacency and approval the spectacle of a Christendom split into countless sects. But already the conviction has taken deep hold upon the hearts of Christian men of all de nominations, that our unhappy divis ions in the Church are a deplorable evil; and I have no doubt that the logic of our political history has had its marked influence in bringing us to see that Church secession is as deplorable an evil as is political secession. The day has not yet come when unity can bs restored; but a long step in that direction has been taken, now that Christian men everewhere recognize the evils of division, and are praying that "as there is hut one Body and one Spirit, and one hope of our calling, one Lord, one Faith, one Baptism, one God and Father of us all; so we may be all of one heart and of one soul, united in one holy bond of truth and peace, of faith and charity, and may with one mind and one mouth glorify God." Yesterday the graves of the patriotic dead were strewn with flowers—com rades and committees being appointed to visit all the cemeteries of the county. Thus closed another Memorial Day and a grateful Nation has again manifested its respect for the illustrious dead The graves of nearly all in the silent city, aside from those of the departed soldiers, displayed tokens in profusion, from the hands of loving friends who wist not to forget their dead, and in consequence of this elaborate manifes tation of keen memoriam the cemetery never before presented so beautiful an appearance. "Dead, but not forgot ten." The ancients believed that rheumatism was the work of a demon within a man. Any one who has had an attack of sciatic or inflammatory rheumatism will agree that the infliction is demoniac enough to warrant the belief. It has never been claimed that Chamberlain's Pain Halm would cast out demons, but it will cure rheumatism, and hundred.-: bear testimony to the truth of this statement. One ap plication relieves the pain, and this quick relief which it affords is alone worth many times its cost. For sale by L. Taggart. mar CASTOR IA For Infants and Children. Tha Kind You Have Always Bought wmsaßmxaxmmm t rs'-'U'aozxrxnj TaJwrojKnrriMnTiJMUUMi R. Seger&Co., THr. PIONEER TAILORS, Opposite M. E. Church, Emporium, I'a. STYLISH CLOTHES for the people, GUARANTEED FITS. We carry at all times, the largest line of imported and dviiiestie goods to be found iu this section 01" the stale Our juices are within the reach of all, while we aim to please our custcmers. New SI'MM MR STYLES now here. STYLISH BUSINESS AMD DRESS. SUITS. R. SEGIiR & CO.