EMPORIUM MILLING COMPANY. PRICE LIST. Emporium, Pa., Nov. 6, 1901. NEMOPIULA, per sick »1 10 Graham, " 55 Rye " 55 Buckwheat " 70 Patent Meal., " 50 Coarse Mea), per 100 1 45 Chop Feed, " 1 45 Fancy White Middlings," 1 35 Bran 1 20 Corn, per bushel, 80 White Oats, p<sr bushel 54 Choice Clover Seed, "1 ChoiceTimothySeed, ! M . rV - tPr |™ Choice Millet Seed, 112 At Market Prices. Fancy Kentucky Blue Grass, J R.C. DODSON." THE Drucjc|ist, EMPORIITIH, PA. IS LOCATED IN THE CORNER STORE. At Fourth and Chestnut Sts.. rxr ||is Only the purest drugs are good for sick people. They can't afford to ex periment. You may safely trust your prescriptions with us. We make a specialty of this work and are proud of the success we have achieved. Doctors appreciate the care and ac curacy with which their prescriptions are compounded and that accounts for our large trade. K. C. DODSON Telephone, 19-2. LOCAL, DEPARTMENT. PERSONAL GOSSIP. Contributions incited. That tchieh you would like to see in this department,let us know by poi talcard or letter, personally. Wm. McGee and wife returned Wed nesday from an extended visit to Wyoming county. Joseph Housler, and wife of Lock Haven, are visiting their son F. B. Housler and family in West Ward. Mrs. H. Othmer, of Williamsport, is visiting her son, John Othmer, and family who are now at home in the house lately occupied by Mrs. Fenton. John J. Hinkle came up from Phila delphia last Sunday and deposited a good solid Republican vote on Tues day, returning to Philadelphia on that day. Mrs. John William Trotter, of New York city, is visiting her father and mother at this place, called here 011 ac count of the illness of Mr. and Mrs. Thos. Trotter. Augustus Niles, Jr., of Wellsboro, Pa., who has been assisting in the erection of Howard Company's new mill, at this place, was a PRESS caller yesterday. Don M. Larrabee, who is attending University of Pennsylvania Law De partment, came home on Sunday to at tend to his duties as judge of election and cast a solid Republican ballot. Hon. J. F. Parsons was last week notified by the Pennsylvania German Society that he had been elected a regular member of the above named organization. Mrs. Johnson of Grant, Pa., who has been visiting her relatives and friends in town the past week, returned home j on Monday. Her son is employed as ; clerk in W. D. Johnson's store at this ' place. Ed. Straight and Geo. Gross came down from Portland Mills on Tuesday ; to visit their friends at this place, and while in town made the PRESS a social •call. Ed. returned on Wednesday, while George will remain in town for soveral days. Miss Laura A. Watters, of St. Louis, Mo.,who has been visiting her cousins, Mr. and Mrs. Fred Julian, during the past three months, left for her home yesterday. Miss Watters, who is a very charming and talented young lady, made many friends hero. We hope she may return in the near future. I "ADollar Saved, is a Dollar Earned." 1 w )j^ I We can save you lots of dollars by buying your |f || | w all Paper, Curtains and Paints of us- Ij I ] | tj|u Youcancarryitinyourhands.onyourshoul- i i■ W T W /\\7l % tt! der, in your pocket or on yourbicycle. t 11. . J „ 8 I II V II fn 1,11 You press the bntton and the Kodak will > * l'! the rest. £ fjj]j life •=LE r E_E r: El_'r !□ jSgiU 'Sfgj EJHEHEzi D ;sllsvj ~ rgE-r?i?»pi!~^Ijf||j James Quinn.Jof eastward, is confin ed to his residence with pneumonia. Mrs. Mclnness, Sr., ofCorry, is here, on account of the illness of Mr. and Mrs. Trotter. Mr. and Mrs. Thos. E. McOann re turned to Emporium this morning.— Renovo News. Mrs. U. A. Palmer and daughter left yesterday on ten day's visit to Harris burg, Baltimore and Washington. We regret to learn of the illness of Mr. Thos. Trotter, who has been con fined to his bed for several days. He is some better at this writing. Mrs. L. A. Hammond, ofHarrisburg, was guest of Mrs. H. H. Mullin, yester day, afler visiting Pan-Am. and other points of interest in New York. Miss A. D. Solleld, of Harrisburg, was guest of Mrs. 11. 11. Mullin last Friday and Saturday, after visiting points of interest in New York. For Sale. The Emporium Opera House is for sale at a reasonable price for spot cash, or negotiable p_iper. The only play house in the county, with a seating capacity of 1,000, size of room 50x100; stage, 50x22, stage opening, 21x22. fully equipped. Natural gas light and Fuel. Will be sold at once to close an estate. Apply to J.W. CLARK,E, 23tf Emporium Pa. Sinnamahoning Liars' Club. The club met on Saturday evening to hear the report from Pap Blodget, as he was sent to Driftwood a few days ago. While at that place he ran against Ed. McNerney, president of the Emporium ! club and Sam McCoolc of the Driftwood club. Sam reports that he lights his shop with the surplus gas from the club. The old man came to the conclusion he could not lace such talent and took a bee line for home, llanseome moved that a fine of six cents be imposed on Pup Blodget and he stand suspended until paid. llarry Ward has heard nothing from his ad for a wife. lie is willing to car ry in the wood if his wife will cut it and make the fire every Sunday morning. No further business the club adjourn ed to meet at the call of the secretary. FIDE. A sluggard takes a hundred steps that takes not one in time. A Physician Testifies. "I have taken Kodol Dyspepsia Cure and have never used anything in my life that did me the good that did," says County Physician Geo. W. ScrogKs of Hall Connty, Ga. ' Being a physician I have prescribed it and found it to give the best results." If the food you eat remains undigested in your stomach it decays there and poisons the system. You can prevent this by dieting but that means starvation. Kodol Dyspepsia Cure digests what you eat. You need suffer trom neither dyspepsia nor starvation. The worst cases quickly cured. Never fails, 11. C. Dodson. The lazy man goes to his work like a thief to the gallows. The Children's Friend. You'll have a cold this winter. Maybe you have one now. Your children will suffer too. For coughs, croup, bronchitis, grip and other winter complaints One .Minute Cough Cure never fails. Acts promptly. It is very pleasant to the taste and perfectly harmless. C. B. George, Winchester, Ivy., writes "Our little girl was attacked with croup late one night and was so hoarse she could hardly speak. We gave her a few doses oi One Minute Cough Cure. It relieved her immediately and she went to sleep. \\ hen she awoke next morning she had no signs of hoarseness or croup. 11. C. Dodson. ou may tell an idle fellow if you but see him eat his dinner. When you feel that life is hardly worth the candle take a dose of Cham , berlain's Stomach and Liver Tablets. They will cleanse your stomach, tone up your liver and regulate your bowels niali | ing you feel like a new man. For sale by L. Taggart. He is idle that might be better em ployed. ; Chamberlain's Stomach and Liver 1 ablets cure biliousness, constipation and headache. 1 hey are easy to take and 1 pleasant in effect. For sale hy L. Taggart. Doing nothing is doing ill. HERBINE sweetens the breath, brigh tens the eyes and clears the complexion without the slightest ill effects whatever, and ensures the natural bloom of health. 1 rice, 50 cents. L, Taggart CAMERON COUNTY PRESS, THURSDAY, NOVEMBER 7, 1901. WrltlnK n Book. The following confession of a novel ist as to the method In which he wrote one of his books Is not, without inter est. He had had the story outlined in his notebook for a long time and ought to have been able to write it, but did not feel able. Then one day he hap pened to think of it again and saw, al- 1 most as if it had been a stage scene, ! the little tableau with which the book | was to close—one of those ends which | •re also a beginning. So he began to J work and in a short lime had complet- | ed the tirst three chapters. Then, for J no reason that he can give, there was a ! Jump, and he wrote the chapters which j are now numbered XXI aud XXII, the | last in the book. Then he went back j and wrote straight on from IV to XVII. j The story had been with him so long I that it was the easiest tiling in the j world to write it.and so lie got through ■ this part of the work with remarkable ; celerity. In the eighteenth chapter nothing happens. Every day for a ! fortnight he rose, breakfasted and tried to write that ehapter; every night he < tore up a big pile of manuscript which 1 he knew to be hopelessly bad. Then he got desperate. The chapter should be written and should stand, whether i good or bad. lie wrote it and left the ; house because it was bad and lie had i resolved not to tear It up. Next day ' lie wrote chapter XIX. and on tlie mor- j row he rewrote chapter XVIII and ; somehow or other contrived to get into j It all that he had failed to get before, j Then ho wrote chapter XX, and the | book was completed.—London Post. I Obeyed Order*. An old Yorkshire farmer was walk ing out one day looking very glum and miserable. He was a typical York- j shireman, and he dearly loved a joke. ; But jokes seemed a long way off just ! then, and the old ninn was thinking j deeply when he was accosted by a j tramp, who made the usual request for j a night's lodgiDgs and something to J eat, as he explained he had had noth- i lug for two whole days. The effect ; upon the farmer when he said this was ; magical. "Why, man,"he said, "I've been look- j ing for you all day." And then without more ado lie knocked him down and walked on him from one end to the other. The tramp got up, looking very staggered, and asked him why 110 had done that. "Well," said lie, "my doctor has or dered me to walk on an empty stomach, and now that I have fulfilled his in junction I can go and have a good feed, and you can come with me."—London Answers. Dathlnß In Sn.lt Luke. "Salt lake is a remarkable sheet of water in many ways, and bathing In it possesses features which are unique," says a Utah man."lt is very invigor ating and refreshing, to be sure, but it takes some time to become accustomed to the extraordinary buoyancy of the water. It Is quite impossible to sink or to drown in the lake, but many peo ple have been killed by the water. When there is a breeze and spray is dashed upon bathers, the water is so dense.ly impregnated with salt that the liquid portion evaporates very quickly aud leaves a deposit of salt on the skin. "On several occasions people have drifted out while bathing or been wrecked and thrown overboard and aft erward found dead 011 top of the water, choked to death by the accumulation of salt in their mouths and nostrils." I Child Ilaptlnm In Early Day*. | The following from the early court records of York county, Me., we give verbatim et literatim: "At a general court held at Saco Sept. 17, 1040, it is ordered by the court that the Worship ful Thomas Georges and Edward God frey, councillors for this province, shall order all the Inhabitants from Pisca taquis to Kenebache, which shall have any children unbaptized 11s sooii as any minister is settled In any of tlieir plantations, they bring their said chil dren to baptism, and if any shall refuse to submit to the said order that the party so refusing shall be summoned to answer their contempt at the next general court to be holden in this prov inca"—Lewlston Journal. No Reciprocity. "Brownly thinks be has the smartest child in the world." "Yes," answered the morose man. "That illustrates the ingratitude of life. There isn't one chance in a thousand that that child when he grows up will go around declaring that he has the smartest father In the world."—Wash ington Star. A Woman Balancing. When a woman stoops over to pick 1 op something on tlie floor, why does } she always balance herself 011 one foot, 1 extending the other outward and back ward as a counterpoise? This ques» | tion, not new, never has been satisfac- | torlly answered.—New York Press. i Painting Costs Half. Devoe lead and zinc outlasts lead and i oil two to one, and costs no more. It 1 saves half the cost of painting. "Buttonholes Sold Here." "Button Holes For Sale Here" is a llgn which peers out through a rather Jlrty window of a lower floor tene ment on the east side. In view of the possibility that it might mean just (vhat It said and that the dealer really ►JId holes for buttons a Tribune re ! porter investigated. A woman whose dress was a mixture j it bathing suit and ball gown answer ed his knock. I "You sell buttonholes here?" was I isked. I "Naw, we make "em!" she exclaimed, I with as much disgust as a very squeaky I voice was capable of showing, j "Well, the sign In the window says"— "Never mind the sign!" she snapped | ftnek. "What do you want with me?" ! She was finally persuaded to tell i something of her new business, j "You see, it's this way," she began. ! "The working girls who live over here have to dress pretty well and do it on ! little money. Most of 'em makes their ; own clothes, but they have not too much time to do the work in. Now, if you was a woman you'd know that it was mighty hard to make buttonholes, specially by hand. Poor girls can't af ford buttonhole machines. They make j up the dresses and bring 'em over to 1 us, and we putin the buttonholes at I so much a hole, 'cording to the kind of j stuff and how well they wants it done. I And that's all there la to it."—New i York Tribune. A Yonthfnl financier. 1 A correspondent asks. Will some of ! your mathematical geniuses kindly tell 1 me if I am absolutely devoid of the calculating faculty in not being able i to see through the following three ) cornered trick, shall I say? A beggar ! boy asked an old gentleman in the street for sixpence. I "What will you do with it If I give | you one?" asked the old gentleman. "Turn it into ninepence quick," re- I plied the boy. "How?" "Give me the tanner, and I'll soon I show you." Tlie boy got the money, darted off to I a baker's shop and bought a three penny loaf, with which he returned to the old gentleman and handed him back 3 pennies. "How's this? You said you would make the sixpence into ninepence." "So I have. The baker's got three pence, you've got threepence and I've got a threepenny loaf. That's nine pence,"—Pearson's Weekly. Canadian Eari. In cold couutries like Canada the ears nre often forced to grow in an un natural way by the custom of forcing the caps down over the skull and mak ing the ears stick out. It is only Amer ican ears which get frostbitten in Can ada. The ears of the natives are in ured to excessive cold. Colds That "hang On." A cold taken at this time of tb«? year, unless "broken up" may on" all winter, and is apt to run into Grip, Catarrh or Bronchitis, and possibly break up the health of a life time. Nothing can be more important than the cure of a fall cold. It means so much, it should have prompt attention. Tweuty per cent of the deaths in the United States are from colds, but no one dies of a cold who takes Dr. Humphreys Specific "77" in time. For sale by all druggists. Sent prepaid on receipt of price Humphreys' Homeo, Medicine Co , N. Y. Established Business For Sale. On account of the death of one of the firm the well-known hardware business of Walker, Howard & Company, at Emporium, Pa., is offered for sale, in cluding stock and building or to suit purchaser. Apply to WALKER, HOWARD & Co., Btf. Emporium, Pa. Foley's Honey and Tar for children,safe,sure. No opiates. IrilßLEßTnn^] * BUCK EYE rlliLl I OINTMENT 1? CURES NOTHING BUT PIIES.j , A SURE and CERTAIN CURE 9 y known for IS years as the L > BEST REMEDY for PILES. 1 SOLD BY ALL DRUGGISTS. 9 j For saleL. by Taggart. fi-26-ly. U Cures Drunkenness. Keeley^ KEELEY write (or fl INSTITUTE, 1 b'u 1 4248 Fifth At#., OMklet UTTBBtIW, VA. Kodol Dyspepsia Cure Digests what you eat. Fall and ■» beluble Winter Stock STORE has just received a new stock of Wall Paper OUR Fall and Winter j stock of evv goods has arrived, and our store is PRICE?, 8c AND 10c full of bargains. - - - —————————— ... . . J4JI THE DOUBLE ROLL The public is invited to call and examine goods and get prices. ... { and sufficient border for a room 16x20 feet for ten cents. Ask the paper peddlers to compete and see how quick they will get out. J. E. SMITH, Merlin* Run, *»a. TAQQA R T « | • 1 ""VRXcKERS I) A. Y' S life Tlie Satisfactory Store. How to improve our store service and at the same time reduce the cost' of living, to our patrons, is a constant study with us. AVe believe both purposes will be served—to some extent at least—by your watch this space, for our Special Drives and other items of interest and tak ing of these money saving opportunities. (ic Lb.GRANULATED SUGAR, Gc Lb. SWEET POTATOES—Best Jer- LAUNDRY SOAP—Lautz Bros, sey sweet potatoes, per peck 20c. Acme per cake ."He. FLOUR "Noble's Best," a WASHING POWDER—Fair blended spring and winter patent, banks Gold Dust, four pound puck- Excelled by none. age 20c. One quarter barrel sack, 81.20. LAUNDRY STARCH —Three One-eighth barrel sack, GOc. pound boxes, 18c. Per barrel, §4.00. jjulk, per lb sc. 12c Lb - ARBUCKLES COFFEE. 12c Lb. Friday and Saturday, only. DO YOU DRINK good coffee? Are you satisfied with the blend you are now using? Better try our "Royal" Java and Mocha 35c lb. 3 lbs. 81.00. TRY DILL PICKLESS. Phone - O". H. DAY. I STORE NEWS. Tailor-Made Suits. Our line of Ladies Tailor-Made Suits is com plete, and comprises the very latest styles. All well made aud at prices that defy competition. Rainy-Day Skirts. In Rainy-Day Skirts our stock is all that can be desired. We also have a handsome line of Mercerized Satin Skirts, which should be seen to be appeciated. Ladies' Flannel Waists. We have a very large stock of Ladies' French Flannel Waists. Something that all ladies should have at this season of the year. Fall Dress Goods. pHrffi; This department, as heretofore, will be head quarters for Dress Goods in this county. We also carry a full line of Suit Cases. M. C. TULIS To Retire. - - Desiring to retire from Business we shall Sell Regardless of Cost Our entire stock at once, intending to close out inside of sixty days. Our stock is not old shelf-worn, having but recently been newly purchased and consists of everything in LADIES FANCY GOODS, Dlt ESS GOODS, COATS, CAPES, ETC. In fact a Variety Store consists of so many different lines that it will be im possible to enumerate. Suffice it to say that this is a POSITIVE SACRI FICE SALE. W. H. CRAMER, Emporium, Pa. 5
Significant historical Pennsylvania newspapers