EMPORIUM MILLING COMPANY. PRICE LIST. Emporium, Dec. 10, 1901. NEMO.'HILA, per s:\ok $1 15 Graham " 60 Rye '• BO Buckwheat "• TO Patent Meal., " 55 Coarse Meal, per 100, 1 (»0 ChopH'eert. " 1 60 Middlings, Fancy " 1 GO Bran, 1 80 Corn, per bushel 80 . White Jvs, i ■: '>ushel B2 Choice Plover Secil, Choice Pi moth y Sreil. j. v t Market Prices. Choice Millet Seed, pancy Kentucky BIUP Grass, I "~R.C. DOOSOM, THE Grodgisi, KMCOUNM, J*A. is LOCATED iM TH." CO3NEI STORE. At Fourth ant! Chestnut Sis.. s«. c. DonsoN. Telephone, 19-2. LOCAL DKPARTMUNT. PERSONAL GOSSIP. Contribution* invited. That which you would like to see in this department,let v* know by pos tal card or letter, personally. Wm. McElvane and wife, of Cameron were in Emporium on Saturday. "Shorty" Harrington spent the holi- j days with friends at his old home. Mrs. Johnston, of Austin, is guest of Mr. and .Mrs. Pretl Julian this week. John E Smith, of Sterling Run, was ! transacting business in Emporium last J week Mrs. N. P. Warner, of Muncy, has j )>een visiting in Emporium the past, j week. Muss Margaret Murphy has accepted a position in the post o33ce at this place. W. D. Ensign and wife were pleasant callers at this oilice Thursday, Dec. 26th. Lindley Seattle; wife and .son of Buffalo, spent the holidays with friends in town. Robt. Proudfoot, of Dußois,spent the holidays with liia brother Orville at this place. Clark Chapman has accepted a posi tion in the Pennsylvania 11. R. yard office at this place. Mrs. M. Phoenix, of Cameron, spent Christmas with her daughter Mrs. R. S. Oyler of Keating Summit. Mrs. F. H. Hayes, of Bradford, spent the holidays with D. C. Hayes and family on Fifth street. James Wagner and Miss Josephine Smith, both of this place, were married at Olean, N. Y., on Dec. 2.5 th, 1901. Mrs. Fetzer, of Centre county, who has been visiting her daughter Mrs. John Cummerford lias returned home. The venerable Geo. Chapman, of Lumber was in town one day last week and made the PRESS sanctum a short visit. J. H. Swain, who is now located at Keating Summit, has moved his family to Emporium where they are comfort ably located in the Odd Fellows Block. Mrs. C. G. Schmidt returned on Mon day Dec. 30th, from Wyoming county, where she was called on account of the death of lier sister, Mrs. Place, who will be pleasantly remembered by many Emporium people, having visited here about two years ago. Mrs. Schmidt was accompanied by the two year old daughter of her sister, who will now make her home in Emporium. -r: —:. a —'^r— —' '— — —' '~y>l (Or° liASTA\AN'S KODAK «j(| I /";^f^r v "A Dollar Saved, is a Dollar Earned." I i! .*.. (tBiMHrK \ ~ H s \ «M /'V 112 Hj 11) \VjiSß^Hr/ Z ' ( We can save you lots of dollars by buying your p - - - } Wall Paper, Curtains and Paints of us i * | Ij! Youcanearryitinyourhands,onyourshoul- 3 Lfl 1 ! \^\ ijjjl der, i n your pnolcetor on yourbicycle. I | I . j I . I IT J 112 I J IsJI («i| You pro«s the button and the Kodak will i 1 i» V—•* ♦ if ■ 1 ' * r (■' the I' Henry Auchu and wife visited Mon treal, Canada, Christmas week. Our old friend C. C. Fay was a pleas ant PRESS caller last Monday. Mrs. Geo. Pepper who has been very seriously ill is slowly improving. Miss Grace A. Walker went to Gale ton on Tuesday to visit her relatives there. J. B. Schriever, of Scranton, shook hands with old-time Emporium friends last week. Miss Edna Warner has returned I from a delightful visit with Philadel phia relatives. John Bliuzler returned on Tuesday from Buffalo where he purchased a line team of horses. Thomas Waddington contemplates a trij) to England in the near future, to visit his relatives. E. J. Jones, of St. Marys, transacted business in Emporium on Tuesday, j while <'ii route to Buffalo. Mr. and Mrs. John M. Given, of j Kane, passed < hristmas day with F, A. j Hill and wife at this place. County Auditor Chas. L. Butler ate j his New Year's dinner with liisbrother, Joseph M., at Port Alleganey. Hector Norris, of Kane, has been I spending a few days in Emporium this week visiting old friends. Rev. Dr. Clark, of Eldred, exchang ed with Rev. Mr. Robertson, Rector of Emmanuel church, last Sabbath. Mrs. Margaret D. O'Brien, of First Fork, was in attendance at the funeral of her mother, Mrs. Mary Galvin. Chester Hockley returned to Buffalo last Sunday, after visiting his father and brother at this place for several days. Miss Grace Leet lias returned to Wilson College, at Chambersburg, after passing the holidays with her parents. Mr. J. W. Ritter, of Wellsboro, has accepted the position of blacksmith at j the Furnace. He is cousin of the late H. C. Rockwell. B. W. Green, Esq., has the thanks of ye editor and family for a basket of oranges, grown at his Florida grove. They were delicious. Mr. and Mrs. Adam Bingeman and ! Miss Annie Bingeman from Treverton ! were the guest of R. P. Bingeman and ' family Christmas week. County Auditors, W. 11. Logue, C. L. Butler and M. Brennan are attend ing to their duties. Mr. W. L. Tnomas is serving the board as clerk. Miss Nellie Dick, of Port Allegany, who is attending the Normal at Fair Haven, took dinner with Rev. and Mrs. 1 W. A. Pugsley, last Monday. Mr. and Mrs. P. J. Glazier, and Mr. and Mrs. H. J. Bryan, of Bradford, j wore in attendance at the funeral of I their grandmother, Mrs. Mary Galvin. W. A. Dairympie, head filer for the C. B. Howard Co., of Emporium, was a pleasant caller at this office on Monday While enrouto* for Galeton.—Austin Autograph. Mrs. W. (Irani Walker-Egbert and her bright little daughter, of Ithaca, N. Y., are visiting the former's parents at this place. Mrs. Egbert has recently returned from Germany. t Miss Mary Davison, who lias been j visiting her parents at this place during | the past two weeks, returned to her studies at Wilson College, Chambers ! burg, last Monday. Dr. E. O. Bardwell was called to Portland Mills I'a., on Tuesday to con sult wilh several physicians as to the condition of Mrs. Geo Gross, who is seriously ill. Dr. Bardwell believes the lady will recover. Roy Gleason came up to attend the watch meeting at the Acorn club, Tues day evening Misses Ruth and Bess Richardson, of Driftwood, are guests of their sister, Mrs. V. King Pifer, of West Long avenue.—Dußois Courier. Mrs. E. C. Davison, of East Ward, was a PRESS caller on Monday, repre seoting the ladies of Presbyterian church, who are arranging for the en ! tertainmont to be given by the State j College Thespians, at this place, Feb. i Bth. Councilman C. G. Catlin was a PRESS ! visitor this ( Wednesday i and in ad dition to renewing his subscription for 1902, ordered the paper sent to his son for one year. Mr. Catlin informs the PRESS that his term as Councilman from the middle ward expires with this councihnanic year. He is one of the most careful, competent and exper ienced members of that. body and the tax-payers should insist upon his re election. CAMERON COUNTY PRESS, THURSDAY, JANUARY 9, 1902. A Layman's Views of Episcopal Con- ■ vention at San Francisco. A PAPER READ BY MB. JOSRA H HOWARD AT PORT ALLEGANY, PA., SUNDAY, NON. 17, 1901. The General Convention of the Episcopal church which meets every three years, was open ed this year of our Lord 1901 at Sau Francisco, California, October 2nd, and closed October 17th. It was two weeks of closely attended five hour sessions each week day, with a multitude of special services on Sundays, closely attended, because the delegations were largely composed of men of known ability in church, financial or business affairs, who have acquired the racogni- , tion and confidence of the world by strict and j constant and steady attention to matters in their ! charge. San Francisco papers said that one of the most interesting features of the Convention wa- the j personnel of the Convention itself. One of course expects to see every Bishop in his place in the upper house, and every clerical \ member of the lower house in attendance, this is their work. But vastly more striking is the regular attendance and work of the lay deputies. What an impressive example it must have been to many of the people of San Francisco who j spend most of their Sundays at tha theatres or, social dances. But above all it ought to arouse every business man everywhere out of the awful apathy into which they have fallen in their re!a- j tions to church work; to know that there was at j that Convention, giving up live weeks of their ! time, watching with deep interest and entering into every detail of the Churches' work and re- ! garding that work apparently of superior interest ! to their own personal gains; two men, partners in the greatest financial concern in the country, j also, men high iu the professing of letters, law- | yers, shining lights at the bar, eminent jurists I from the bench, and men standing high in every | commercial relation, men who are not just be- | ginners in putting on religion, but who all their j lives have beeu active Church workers, holding fast to the form of sound words as they received them, and still anxious to spread the comfortable : Gospel Of Christ for the uplifting and saving of j all men. Prominent among these might be mentioned ! Mr. Itobt. Treat Paine of Boston, one of thefore- I most figures in philanthropical work in America, I grand-son of the signer of the Declaration of Iu- j dependence by that name, and for thirty years ! President of the Associated Charities of Boston, j and who has given $200,090 as an endowment in j trust to the Paine Association for charitable pur- } poses. Massachusetts also sent Dean Hodges, whose sermons are so widely read. JudgeStiness I of the Superior Court of Rhode Island, Mr. Burton ! Mansfield, the distinguished lawyer from Con necticut, Mr. J. P. Morgan the banker, Mr. F. L. j Stetson the lawyer, and Dr. Greer, all from New | York, the venerable white haired citizen of Florida, Mr. Geo. H. Fairbanks, Maryland sent Mr. Jos. Packard one of her leading citizens also Mr. E. Tatnai Warr.er, a man of vast business j interests, who is warden of the oldest church in I Wilmington and an active Sunday School worker, j Then from Pennsylvania were Judge Hugh M. ! North also Francis A. Lewis and Chas. Clement, | prominent members of the bar. In the Milwaukee delegation was L. H. Moore house, representing the largest and most ener- , getic publishers of church literature in America. ' We should also mention Mr. Geo. C. Thomas ! the Treasurer of the General Board of Church | Missions, who is head of the hanking house of i Drexel, Morgan & Co., of Philadelphia, but who j finds time and takes pleasure in active church i work, besides being Superintendent of one of the j largest Sunday Schools in America, that of the Holy Apostles of Philadelphia, having I think about 1500 scholars. To attempt to write of all who were present or | what was accomplished would require much : space. Suffice it to say that there were about 70 i Bishops present who sat in the Sunday schoo' room of Trinity Church with closed doors and ' acted as a law-making body by themselves, they having full charge of all Missionary work of the church, with the making or disposing of Priests and Bishops and the setting forth of special prayers for special occasions, excepting that no change can be made in the wording or use of the Prayer Book or the translation of the Bible, uor can any newiy elected missionary Bishop be consecrated until such change or election is ap proved and concurred in by the House of Lay and Clerical deputies voting i:i general assembly in manner prescribed by the Constitution and Church Canons, nor can any change be made in the Constitution or Canons unless it receives the concurrent vote in both Houses in two consecu tive triennial Conventions. The House of De : puticssat in the main body of Trinity churchand i consisted of four Layineu and four Clergymen i from each of the fifty-nine dioceses entitled to representation as fully organized dioceses. These i with the representatives of missionary districts, who were not entitled to vote, made about 700 of j an attendance at the Convention proper. Then ! there were the Womans' Auxiliary, the King's Daughters, the St. Andrews Brotherhood and the j Board of General Missions, with their delegates ! and friends, making an estimated total of 1,000 j Episcopalian visitors in San Francisco during j the Convention. ! The remarkable thing about the Convention ] was not that Mr. Morgan and Bishop Potter : should sit so long and so attentively at a Church | Convention for they have attended several Gen- I eral Conventions, before, but to my mind it was j truly remarkable that these two men should sit j as members of the Board of Domestic and Fore ign Missions of the church and that the Treas urer of such Mission should report a deficit of over SIOO,OOO. This is not because Bishop Potter is careless in j money matters or that .Morgan is neither inter ! ested in Missions nor liberal with his money, j Mr. Morgan's father before bim gave largely I to the Church, and he himself in a quiet way i gives largely and regularly to the Church, as ; well as to many outside institutions for the good j of his fellow men. The world does not know him ! for his goodness, yet his goodness seems equal to his greatness. It is reported that he gve $1,000,000 | to endow the Harvard Medical School, $500,000 to j Loomis Hospital for Consumptives, $33,000 to St. | Georges Church, New York, $100,090, to thcY. '■ M. C. A., also liberal subscriptions to the Galves | ton Relief Fund and to preserving the Palisades of the Hudson River, and has established a hos ) pital at Aix-Les Bains, France, therefore it would | seem there is a shortage ill the funds of the Mis sions Board not because Mr. Morgan and other I wealthy members of the Board of Missions have I not paid their shares, bitt perhaps because of our Lord's teaching that each and every one should I be taught and given a chance to help themselves land do their share toward helping others. A great many wished to have a collection taken at the closing services of the Convention with a special call for ofTerines to make up the defici ency in the Missions account, slating that many persons had expressed a desire to place their checks and due-bills on the plate, and a motion to that effect was made, but was ruled out of order by Chairman Lindsay, who said that the meeting would be in charge of the House Bishops and that he did nit think they would even consider a petition from us as it was con , trary to all precedents to allow anything to detract j from the interest in the reading of the Pastoral ; Letter and that he hoped all would send their subscriptions to the Treasurer, Mr. Thomas. ; This would seem practical even if they had j (o forego the sentimental enthusiasm aud pleas. ; ure of having them placed on the altar by the Bishops, and the money would go just as far, if ! they were enough in earnest to send it. Speaking of the Pastoral Letter, it was fine, and full o good ideas, but to me it seemed too long and thef 1 language too glib and smooth, so much of it I seemed too weak, or the words did not seem to j ring with the triumphant consciousness of being , right and authoritative. | I once attended the play of"The Two Vag | rants," and one of the climaxes in the play was j where one boy who had just picked a ladies pocket declared boldly and firmly, that stealing j was wrong and he would never steal again. He ; might have said the same thing meekly and i penitently with equal force, and just in the op. I posite way it seems to me that the good words of the Pastoral Letter, lack both the power of meek j ness and of bold force in much of its construction. | In fact I was a little disappointed in the House | of Bishops. This may have been entirely due ] to my fault or lack of acquaintance, for I thought j Bishops Potter and Dudley, with others whom I j heard and saw frequently, were fine men and ! exemplars of grand Christian thought, but judg i ing from the messages sent out by the House of i Bishops to the House of Deputies for acceptance ; and confirmation, they seemed too willing to | compromise and listen to public clamor on what | the House of Deputies thought were important I points of principle, and the Committee on the | revision of the Scriptures was freely criticized be j cause the Bishops, or someone of the Committee, ! had not asked or employed the assistance of a ) number of the most eminent scholars of the I world outside the church in their efforts to im } prove the expressions a id meaning of the Bible, j and so emphatic was the House of Deputies in j their disapproval that all changes in the transla | tion made by the Committee solely on their own j opinion or scholarship were thrown out and only | such translations made by the American and j English revisers some twenty years ago as were j approved by the Committee were authorized by ' the House to be printed as marginal reading to j the King James version. Just here I might add ! that the Convention was truly democratic and I American, for while the whole House of Deputies j stood up to honor the Bishops when they came [ over to our House in a body to visit us or sit with | us, just as we would honor the President of the j United States, still the Bishops and Clergy were , no robes or signs of distinction, and when a vote i was taken each vote was only and always tallied 1 as one, whether of Bishops, Clergy or Layman. ! One of the finest experiments of the Convention j was the spirit of respect and toleration. The ; rules governing debate not only are most liberal i to the minority and also to new members, but, i they do not show the least favoritism to the more j able, and do not allow applause under any cii ■ cumstances. This spirit was not only shown to the Bishops and officers but to each aud every : deputy even in the heights of the animated dis | cussions on the Huntington amendment and the Marriage and Divorce Canon. The question ; might arise insome minds which section of the country was best or most ably represented. | We would say the East had the largest delegation, that New York represented the most wealth, that the West was most alive, although Pennsylvania, New York and Massachusetts, to say uothing of Rhode Island and Maryland were not asleep. Pittsburg had the best lookimg delegation, while brains and large hearteduess were about evenly dis tributed. Each diocese was allowed two pews, one for , the Clergy aud one for the Laity, and it would have been impossible for a stranger to distinguish a southern, or northern or western delegation by their looks or speech; they were all Americans and all churchmen; some large but very quiet, some small and noisy. It was one grand illu stration of the fact that the size and shape of a person's mouth does not determine ths quantity and quality of his talk. Another grand thing about the Convention were the Missionary meet ings and the fact that no collection or subscrip tion was taken at any of them. On the road out a great many of the excursion trains stopped over Sunday at Salt Lake City, aud in the even ing there was a missionary mass meeting which tilled the big Salt Lake theatre to overflowing, and although the Lord Bishop of Newcastle, England, aud several American Bishops spoke there was no collection asked or taken, nor was there any oollection made at Mechanics Pavilion | when the House of Bishops and House of Depu- I ties with about 15,000 other people listened to the ablest men in the Church. They might have ; raised SIOO,OOO then and there, but they were ; helping the surpliced choir of 500 voices sing I"The Churches one Foundation is Jesus Christ her Lord." ! San Francisco with her many high hills, steep streets and mild climate is a fine, large, wealthy and busy place, well governed, but perhaps some what dirty during the dry season. They have a very fine park with ball grounds for men and swings and other play-grounds for children. All the coast towns ot California from San Francisco south are well supplied with Spanish Catholic Missions, some dating back 200 years, and San Francisco itself has perhaps as many churches of all kinds as our Eastern towns, in proportion to its size, and like most large cities, the Episcopal Church predominates. It was not always so. In 1849, when the gold fever was at its height, and the only law was administered b3' Judge Lynch, forty men met iu San Francisco and signed a paper that they would stand by one another and held religious services and send for a minister. They did so and the result ot their labors is the largest congregation and finest Church building in the City, the mother of all the other churches. Some of those orignial forty men are still vestry men of that Trinity Church and say the ambition of their lives was to have the general Convention of the Episcopal Church meet in their building, the pioneer Prote-itant church on the Pacific coast. On another hill opposite, and about halfway through the Park is the I'rayerbook Cross where in 1577 Sir Francis Drake is supposed to have held the first Prayerbook service in America, if the Episcopal Church can maintain its lead in ban Francisco and convert the 20,000 Chinamen as well as her foreigners from all parts of the world,from their erroneous ideas about God and teach them to regard God as an Almighty, merci ful and just Father, and all men and nations as their lirothors in God'.* sight, then the Church will not need to remodel her name so that men will better understood her. All the world will acknowledge her to be the teacher aud servant of the living God. Kight or wrong, the Convention will be known as much for what it refused to do as what it did. It refused to withhold Baptism, Confirmation, marriage and the Lord's Supper from divorced persons when the Church is satis fied that they are the innocent parties to divorces, granted for adultery. It refused to allow Bishops to exercise spiritual oversight over congregations which did not use the American Prayerbook. It refused to electa Bishop for Foreign Missions until satisfied that lie was an American citizen. It refused to sanction at this time the printing of any new translation of the Bible. It refused to recognize any distinction between what are known as high and io-.v churchmen and it refused to allow the State of Illinois an extra Bishop un less the churches ot that State would guarantee all his expenses. On the other hand it adopted several important amiuendments to the Consti tution and Canons allowing the House of Bishops to select any member of their House to act as presiding Bishop for a definite term of years, his election to be subject to the approval of the House of Deputies. It raised the acceptable age of Deaconesses from twenty-five to thirty years, accepted as American territory and elected Bishops for Porto Rico, Hawaii, and the Phillipine Island.;. The Committed on translations of the Bible, on changing the name of tiie Church, 011 the Forma tion of Provinces and on Amendments to the 1 Constitution were all continued, to report at the next meeting which will be held in Boston in \ 1804. The question 011 Marriage and Divorce was most happily referred to a joint committee with instructions to meet with duly appointed com mittees from the other reiigous bodies and with ! State Legislatures for the purpose of agreeing on a uniform law for all state? and churches. Re cognizing the Churchei ;<reai duty to all classes and conditions of men, the Convention also ap pointed a special joint Standing Committee from I oth Houses to consider the subject of the rela tions of Capital and Labor and the duty of the Church to all parties in labor troubles. First, \ last and all the time, nights and Sundays there ; were Mission and L%b >r and Sunday school ! meetings. Our own Bishop Whitehead was '■ chairman at a large meeting at Oakland and every church in the City and near by towns had a number of Bishops and prominent clergymen < as well as laymen at their various services, not for the purpose of raising money, but to stir up each other and the people to realize that the church existed solely and only to act as messen- j ger, bearing the news of the comfortable gospel of Christ and teaching tha' true duty toman , cannot exist when duty to God i; neglected and that neglect and wrong actions surely drift into 1 wrong thinking. With these and many other things to her credit ono of the largest attended and most earnest Conventions in the United States adjourned. Of course there were receptions and suppers. Graduates of different colleges had an evening to themselves and delegations oft lie various dio ceses arranged to have dinner together at some hotels inviting their Bishop to join them. Then there was the general reception to all Church people and their friends at the Hopkins Institute Building and the free trip nround the Bay on a Government tug, and it would be hardly fair not to mention Dr. Saml. Hart, Secretary of House of Bishops and Dr. C. L. Hutching, Editor of the Church Hymnal and Secretary of House of Deputies, both of whom have long served many Conventions in these capacities. Resolutions of Respect. WHEREAS, Daniel J. Downey died on the23rd, of December, 1901. WHEREAS, He was always attentive and ready to perform his duties toward the success of our organization of which he was a Charter member, therefore be it Resolved, That we members of Hamilton Hose Company, No. 3 of the Emporium Fire Depait ment extend our sympathy to the bereaved parents of our deceased member, and be it further Resolved, That as a token of respect, we attend the funeral in body and drape our Charter and Hose House in morning for a period of thirty days. Resolved, That a copy of these resolutions be transmitted to the parents of our deceased mem ber and spread on our minute book and also a copy sent to each of our local papers. CLARBNCK RICHIE, J. B. MCLCAHEY, WM. ROBINSON, Committee. The prevention of consumption is en tirely a question of commencing the proper treatment in time. Nothing iso well adapted to ward off fatal lung trou bles as Foley's Honey and Tar. Taggart. Children Poisoned. Many children arc poisoned and made nervous and weak, if not killed outright, by mothers giving them cough syrups containing opiates. Foley's Iloney and Tar is a safe and certain remedy for eouglis, croup and lung troubles, and is the only prominent cough medicine that contains 110 opinatcs or otlur poisons. L. Taggart. 100:2. 1003. A HAPPY NEW YEAR. 1 )AY'S, Tlie Satisfactory Store. If wc have succeeded in making this a satisfactory place to deal in years past, we are indeed glad and desire to thank you for the liberal patronage which we have enjoyed, and which has made it possible. This is a progressive age and we strive to keep up with the times Years come and go, but never find us idle. With increased experience, we hope to make this a more satis factory year to all, than any in the store's history. We want to make it a pleasure to you, to deal here, by having everything satisfactory. Thus we can, and will, save you expense. Always look for our Special Sales. They should inteiest you. Come in Friday and Saturday and see if it will not pay you. No Trading Stamps, but right goods and prices. Yours for business, Phone 6. OT- H* 33 Children .Especially Liable. Burns, bruises and cuts arc extremely painful aDil if neglected often results in blood poisoning. Children are especially liable to such mishaps because not so careful. As a remedy DoWitt's Witch Ilazel Salve is unequalled. Draws out the fire, stops the pain, soon heals the wound. Beware of counterfeits. Sure cure for piles. "DeWitt's Witch Hazel Salve cured my baby of eczema after two physicians gave her up," writes James Mock, X. Webster, Intl. "The sores were so bad she soiled two to five dresses a day.' It. C. liodson. The man rarely marines the woman he jokes about;shc often marries the man she laughs at. Rev. J. M. Yinpling, pastor of the Bedford St. M. 10. Church, Cumberland, Md., says: "ft affords uic great pleasure to recommend Chamberlain's Colic. Cholera and Diarrhoea li'-medy. I have used it and know others who have never known it to fail." For sale by L. Tagaart. Pneumonia and La Grippe Coughs cured quickly by Foley's Honey and Tar. llofuse substitutes. L. Taggart PEOPLE'S COLUMN. rpWO FREES SCHOLARSHIPS for Cameron 1. county, Pa. The Carnegie Normal and Busi ness College of Itoyers, Ohio, will give Free Tui tion to two students from Cameron County, Pa. One scholarship good at their College at Royers, Ohio, and one scholarship good for a course bv correspondence. Normal, Academic and Busi ness courses including book keeping and Short hand are taught. Applicants should address the College. MUSICAL COLLEGE. The College of Music at Freeburg, Snyder county. Pa.. ofTers a cheerful and commodious home to young people desiring instruction in Vocal and Instrumental Music. £).'j will pay for six week's instruction and board. Spring term begins May sth. For Catalogue address HENRY B. MOYER. Notice of Jlecliiiß of Htock liolders rpHE annual meeting of the Stockholders o 1 1 the Emporium & Rich Valley R. R.Co., will be held at the Law Ollice of B. W. Green, Tues day, January 21 st, 1902, at one o'clock, p. m.for the election of"officers and transaction of such other business as may come before them. J. VV. KAYE, Scc'y. Emporium, Pa.. Jan. Bth, 1902. —2t EI-ECTION NOTltlv. THE FIRST NATIONAL BANK, Emporium, Pa., Dec. 7tli, 1901. HPHE annual meeting of the stock-holders for I the election of a Hoard of Directors and the transaction of such other business as may be laid before them,will beheld at the Bank on Tues day, January 14th. 1902, between the hours of one and three in the afternoon. T. B. LLOYD, Cashier. Administratrix's Notice. Estate of CHARLES W. BELDIN, deceased. NOTICE is hereby given that Letters Testa mentary upon the estate r ' r Charles W. Bel din, deceased, late of Grove .ownship, Cameron county, Pa., have been granted tothe undersigned, all persons indebted to said estate are recftiested to make payment and those having claims to present the same for settlement. MARTHA B. BELDIN, Administratrix. Sinnamahoning, Pa., Dec. 16th, 1901.—4t. Kxccutors' Notice. N'OTIC'E is hereby given that the undersigned have been appointed Executors of the Es tate of Washington Railey, deceased, late of Wharton, Potter county, Pa. All persons having claims against said Estate, and those indebted, will make immediate settlement. J. LUCORE NELSON, RALPH M. WILLIAMS, Executors. First I'm k. Fa,, Jan. 2. 1902. 4t. ,v. -.csbbeek* * ) ' .... A,,-, i - v " y. : i"• " • ; jj ' v |f >'i C«6 & SLiU jj| - Education I ■ i? An exceptional opportunity offered £9 1 *« to young men and young women ton [prepare for teaching or for business. M Four regular courses; also special In work la Music, Shorthand, Type- 181 writing. Strong teaching force, wall Raj graded work, good discipline and H bard study, Insure best results to M students of £4 Central State | | Norma! School | ( LOCK HAVEN. Clinton Co., PA. 3 ' Handsome buildings perfectly equipped, HI hi steam heat. <lectrie lights, abundance of 3 £1 pure mountain water, extensive campus flj h| and athletic grounds. Expenses low. »end (Jj h| for catalog. nj J. R. FLICKINGER, Principal, jfl | Centra! State Normal School, p K i.OCK HAVEN", PA. :3
Significant historical Pennsylvania newspapers