EMPORIUM MILLING COMANY. PRICE LIST. Emporium, Pa., Feb. 5,1901. NENVOPIULA, pei sack *1 15 Graham, " 00 Rye " <SO Huckwneat ' TO Patent Meal " 60 Coarse Miial, i>ei 100, l 50 Ohopb'eed, " 1 50 Middling Fancy •• 1 50 Bran, 1 10 Corn, per bushel hi White Oats » •< uuauel, 60 Choice Clove i Heed, Choice Timothy Seed, ! » t Market Prices Oholoe Millet deeil. 112 \t iwarkeu rices. Kancy Kentucky Blut-Grass, I R. C. DODSCN, THE Drdcjgist, i: -I ;•«>.III - JI, T',» . ! IS LOCATEU IN TH£ COKNF.R STORE. At Fourth and Chestnut Sts.. j •' 'j c. OOM.SON. Telephone, 19-2. —— ll2 ——M M——B—B——BWWW 1.0 C.l- IM;P ARTMENT. PERSONAL GOSSIP. Contributions invited. That which you would i tike to see in this drpartnu nt,let un know by pos• ; lal card or letter, personally. Warren Moore, of Rich Valley, was a I PRESS visitor on Tuesday. H. B. Muttersbaugh, of Driftwood, \ was a PRESS visitor on Monday. Henry Taylor, of Sinnamaliouing, is now engineer at Emporium Roller Mills. W. H. Crocker, of Ridgway, has been in town this week, calling on his friends. S. J. Fee, the fruit dealer, has re turned from Chicago, for the summer campaign. Geoge S. Piper and Michael Zwald gladdened the hearts of the printer last Friday evening. Chas. L. Butler, after another tussle with rheumatism, lias resumed work in his wagon factory. R. Lockwood and Burton Housler, of Shippen, transacted business with the PRESS last Saturday. Amos Naragon, of Rich Valley, was a PRESS visitor on Monday and renew ed his subscription for another year. John W. Norie, of Reno vo, is visiting in town for a few days, guest of his son J. L. Norie and wife, on Sixth street. (). S. Peters, of Whittemore Hill, called to see ye editor last Saturday and planked down two silver dollars for PRESS. i,|H. W. Martindale came over from Lorshbaugh last Friday and transacted business in town. He reports times lively on the Fork. A. J. Seifert, who hustles evory day for F. X. Blumle's bottling works, was a PRESS caller on Tuesday. "Toney" is a reliable man always. Jos. J. Lingle, one of Cameron county's most estimable citizens and C. B. Howard Company's right-hand may, was a PRESS caller on Tuesday. Dr. Warren, of Lewisburg, the "Bird Book" man, transacted business in Emporium last Monday and while Waiting for a train dropped into chat with ye editor. Frank T. McNarney, who, with his wife returned from the Philippines recently, left Sunday afternoon, for San Francisco, Cal., where he is order ed to report for duty. Lieutenant Mc- Narney came home on sick leave.— Lock Haven Republican. EASTMAN'S KODAK JlEizitlSE; iOD | "A Dollar Saved, is a Dollar Earned." | | jf e can save yon lots of dollars by buying your |j ~ :K ' V | Wall Paper, Curtains and Paints of us- J j ■, \ i J I'nil Youcan :arryitinyourhands,onyourshoul- S IJ | T t*J\ \/I 'A (JJ|| der, in your pocketor on yourbicycle. < I I / \f |i»: f«i]. You ess the button and the Kodak will j 11 - >■- 112 I *V / J | ; Bh | J : 1 —" .P. —Q— —— '— i'l— 13 " "—~~ '!: :! ' i~ E. M. McFndden attended court on Monday. Hon. W. C. Arnold, ol Dußois, is at tending to legal business in town to day. Col. J. O. Brookbank, of Driftwood, transacted business in Emporium Monday evening. Chas. W. Risliell left for Harrisburg on Monday to attend the State Con vention of Undertakers. Mrs. Louise Smith, of Portville, N. Y., has been visiting her daughter, Mrs. S. J. Hacket for several days. Rev. O. S. Metzler, who is trausact ing business in Buffalo, will return ■ home in time for Sunday's services. Henry Auchu and VV. H. Howard left last Sunday on an inspection tour ; in West Virginia, to be absent several days. Frank McCabe, who has attained quite a reputation as an artist, has gone j to Port Allegany to assist in a drug store. Arthur Kline has returned from Johnsonburg and is employed in How ard's mill. Hi:* mother, we learn, will soon return here. Miss May Erlbeck, of Coudersport, was guest of her sister, Miss Nellie, at this place, the past few days, returning j | home on Monday. Miss Mattie Collins, of Driftwood, was visiting the Emporium schools this week and incidentally looking I after her "fences" as a side issue. Mrs. Rider, who has been guest of | her daughter, Mrs. E. J. Smith, for | several months, returned to her home, | on Monday, at Springfield, Conn. Mrs. A. N. Vodack, well and favor- : ably known as formerly a resident of Emporium, is guest of Mrs. M. A-. Rockwell for a few days, en route for Austin, where they have located, j John R. Libby, who has resided at Sterling Run for so many years, but lately employed at North Bend,visited in town last week and did not forget to call on the PHESS. It is reported that Miss Florence Card, daughter of Mr. and Mrs. J. M. Card, was married at Olean, last week. ; Mrs. Griswold, grandmother of the : bride, at tended the wedding. Dr. and Mrs. S. S. Smith left on | Monday for St. Louis, Mo., where the | Doctor will attend the National Rail | way Surgeons Convention. They will j visit relatives in Southern Missouri j before returning home. Master Mechanic Hammond, of Em porium Furnace has returned from visiting that new daughter at Lebanon. William Donacker, foreman, was also down that way visiting, the past week —possibly his mother. Judge Jerome B.Niles, of Wellsboro, I stopped in Emporium last Monday | while enroute to Ridgway, calling 011 i old friends. Judge Niles is very popu ! lar with the people of this section who I are, always pleased to meet him. He ; favored tliu Pitr.-s oflice with a call. Dr. V. K. Corbett, of Driftwood, was : calling on Emporium friends on Mon • day evening. The genial doctor's I numerous friends will be pleased to 1 learn that he has commenced to take |on llesh and I;ope.; to heat Pap Yothers I in the near future. Mrs. Nellie (Moore) Bond, of Port i Deposit, Md., and Mrs. E. F. Cum | mings, of Pittsburg, visited relatives i and friends in Emporium last Saturday i and Sunday. While hero they visited j the Rich Valley cemetery, where no ! many of their family rest, i Mrs. Lulu 11. Fulton, formerly a resi dent of Emporium, sends us a invita tion to attend the commencement ex ercises of Chicago College of Medicine j and Surgery, of which she is a member of the graduating class. The exercises took place last Monday afternoon. Mr. O. R. Racey and Miss Sadie Smith, of Portville, N. Y., were mar ried at the home of the bride, last Wednesday, by Rev. F. P. Clark, pas tor of the Portville Presbyterian ; church. The bride and groom came to Emporium on Wednesday evening, remaining until Sunday, guests of the , bride's sister, Mrs. S. J. Hackot. 1 Jos. Butler, who has been located at Raton, New Mexico, for several months, returned to Emporium last Thursday. Mr. Butler is greatly pleas- ed with Raton and expects to return ; next fall. He speaks in glowing terms of our young friend Harry Fry, who is | doing a large and prosperous business, | and prophecies well for Pearson Fry, | who recently married Miss Flemming, of this place. CAMERON COUNTY PRESS, THURSDAY, MAY i, 1902. Geo. Towers, ol'Driftwood is visiting 111 town to day. Squire Blodgett, of Grove, is calling on friends in town to-day. Bert Burrows is located in Alex. Mc- Dougall's store. Mr. B. is a very faithful clerk. John Doll called at the PRESS office last week and ordered his paper sent to Southerland, Nebraska. He has sold his Sizer Run farm. lion William P. Jenks, aged 81 years, died at Boorkville last week. He was a . brother of Hon. Geo. A. Jenks, late I Democratic candidate for Governor. F. A. Blackwell, of North Bend, and T. S. Patchell, of Driftwood, move to Spokane. Wash., this week, where Mr. | B. has large timber interests. Carpets! Carpets! Carpets! A finer line of carpet than ever, now on tap at Laßar's. Will meet all coinpetion and go one better. Costs you nothing to call and see them. Come one come all. GEO. J. LABAK. Society Happenings. Last Thursday was William G. Bair'a birthday and about twenty-five of his lady friends called at his residence 011 Sixth street during the evening, prop erly gowned for a jolly good timo. A stranger might have taken them for a new Si Blunkard troupe, but they were only out for a pleasant time. It is needless to add they were hospitably entertained by Mr. Bair and his esti mable wife. Ot course the event was a genuine "surprise" to Mr Bair. One of the most enjoyable hops given in a long time was that at the opera house last Tuesday evening, the music being furnished by the Jamestown Italian Orchestra. The music was simply m*and and the lads and lassies made merry until after mid-night. Reveals a Great Secret. It is often asked how such startling cures, that puzzle the best physicians, are effected by Dr. Kings New Discovery for Consumption. Here's the secret, ft cuts out the phlegm and gerui-iufeeted mucus, and lets the life-giving oxygen enrich and vitalize the blood. It heals the inflamed, cough worn throat and lungs. Hard colds and stubborn coughs soon yield to Dr. King's New Discovery,: the most infallible remedy for all Throat and Lung diseases. Guaranteed bottles 50c and $l.OO. Trial bottles free at L. Taggart's. All is not gold that shows up in a glittering mining prospectus. The May number of the Woman's' Home Companion opens with an article j on "Where the Starts From," by ! Eugene Wood. "Behind the Scenes in j a Department Store" gives shoppers a glimpse into the workings of these great enterprises. There is a valuable article on Ellen M. Stone. "Little Journeys to the Woods and Fields" [ and "The Month of May-Days" are ap- i propriate outdoor features. The repro- j duction of five paintings by Charles j Schreyvogel, makes a striking double-1 page feature. A new serial story by j Cyrus Townsend Brady "Woven With ! the Ship," makes the magazine notable ! in fiction. Will N. Harben and Elliot : Flower contribute short stories. Pub- j lished by The Crowell Publishing Co., j Springfield, Ohio; one dollar a year; ten cents a copy; sample copy free. Religion is the best armor a man can have, but it is the worst cloak. WHAT WE SAY Is What W© Mean ß | There is no honor or profit In fooling people—especially the sick; our Vinol guarantee is made in good faith. Those who buy it and get no benefit from it may have their money back. Every sick person should be willing to try it on such terms. People who are all run down—have no appetite—pale women and children— those who want to gain llesh—should try Vinol on our guaranteo. It is just the medicine for old people and nursing mothers and all persons who have a hanging-on cough or have any throat and lung disease. Everything that is In Vinol is plainly printed on the label of each package. Re member that we guarantee Vfnol and re fund the purchase money If you are not satisfied. Hi Reliable Drug Store. WANTED. RPO contract the pcelint? and stocking of 75 to 1 100 cords of OAK and Hemlock Bark. Also logs and ties. GEO. H. DICKINSON. Emporium, Pa., Mayl, 1902. 10-3t Stands Like a Stone Wall. Between your children and the tor tures of itching und burning eczema, scaldhead or other skin diseases.—llow? why. by using Bucklen's Arnica Salve, I earth's greatest healer. Quickest cure for Ulcers, Fever Sores, Salt Rheum, Cuts, Burns or Bruiaes. Infallible for i Piles. 2fie at L. Taggarts drug store. The path to greatness with God lies j open to all. What Thin Folks Need. Is a greater power of digestion and assimilation food. For theui Dr. King's 1 New Life Pills work wonders. They tone and regulate the digestive organs, ' expel all poisons from the system, | enrich the blood, improve appetite, make healthy flesh. Only 25c at L. Taggart's. Hearts that will not melt in the sun \ shine of love will melt in the flame of wrath. Biliousness is a condition characterized by a disturbance of the digestive organs. The stuuiachis debilitated,the livei torpid, the bowels constipated. There is a loath ing of food, pains in the bowels, dizziness, coated tongue and vomiting, first ot the undigested or partly digested food and then of bile. Chamberlain's Stomach and Liver Tablets allay the disturbances of the stomach and create a healthy ap petite. They also tone up the liver to a healthy action and regulate the bowels. Try them and you are certain to be much pleased with the result. For sale by L. Taggart. No one is nearer heaven by belongiug to the upper class of society. No Loss of Time. I have sold Chamberlain's Colic, Cholera and Diarrhoea Remedy for years, and would rather be out of coffee and sugar than it 1 sold five bottles of it yesterday to threshers that could go no farther, and they are at work again this morning—ll. 11. Phelps, Plymouth, Oklahoma. As will be seen by the above , the threshers were able to keep on with their work without losing a single day's time. You should keep a bottle of this Remedy in your home. For sale by L. | Taggart. It is still worth while to be right no matter who is wrong. The Most Common Ailment. More people suffer from rheumatism | than from any other ailment. This is wholly unnecessary too, for a cure may be effected at a very small cost. G. W. Wescott, of Meadowdale, N. Y., says:"l have been efflicted with rheumatism for i some time and it has caused me much suffering. I concluded to try Chamber | lain's Pain Balm and am pleased to say that it has cured me." For sale by L. Taggart. The foolish bark at truth because it is ; a stranger to them. Try the new remedy for costiveness, : Chamberlain's Stomach and Liver Tablets. Every box guaranteed. Price, 25 cents, j For sale by L Taggart. ! One who predicts thunder storms isn't necessarily a lightning calculator. Wliooping Uough. A woman who has had experience j with this disease, telis how to prevent I any dangerous consequence from it. She j says: Our three children took whooping j Cough last summer, our baby boy being ! only three months old, and owing to our | giving them Chamberlain's Cough Ilcmedy, they lost none of their plump ness and came out iu much better health then other children whose parents did uot use this remedy. Our oldest little girl would call lustily for cough syrup between whoops.—Jessie Pitikey llall, Springfield, Ala. This remedy is for sale by L. Taggart. Keep your sccrect from your friends and your enemies will never get next to it. Sciatic Rheumatism Cured After Four teen Years ot Suffering. "I have been afflicted with sciatic rheu matism for fourteen years," says Josh Edgar, of Germantown, Cal. "I was able to be around but constantly suffered. I tried everything I could hear of and at last was told to try Chamberlain's Pain Balm, which I did and was immediately relieved and in a short time cured, and I am happy to say it has not since return ed." Why not use this liniment and get well ? It is for sale by L. Taggart. CASTOR! A For Infants and Children. The Kind You Have Always Bought Signature of ICG CREAM at wholesale. Bonini Bros., Manufacturers of PURE ICE CREAM. | RIDGWAY, Pa., Have greatly enlarged I and improved their facili ties for making ice cream and are better than ever H prepared to supply the trado with all kinds of 9 ice cream on short notice R and at reasonable prices. They have prepared to B make a specialty of this B line of business and in- || tend to do a larger busi ness than ever before. They will make better B cream than ever. They want your orders and propose to please their patrons no as to get the trade. Give them a trial. ROTH TELEPHONES. Wall i Paper. i i At Taggart's Drug Store j the finest line ever brought . i to town. Prices lower than ; you ever saw them. Don- ! ble rolls as low as 5c and j the very best at 35c. Bor der just a 1 iitie in advance of paper. Faints, Varnish, Stains, Varnish Stains, Enamel, in all shades and colors. 1 A better line than ever of fered to our people. Don't fail to call and examine. L. TAGGART. STRAWBERRIES, T •) C CELERY. PINE APPLES. I a /\ \V LETTUCE, RIPE TONAROES, | Jr~\ 1 v RADISHES. CRANBERRIES, CUCUMBERS. THE SATISFACTORY STOKE. Are you taking advantage of the low prices for strictly first "class goo ds, which this store is giving? If not, why not? Look and see if there is not something listed here that will do you some good. FRIDAY AMD SATURUAY SPECIAL. FANCY CALIFORNIA LEMONS, doz. iße. Bought espe cially for this sale. Don't miss them you'll not get this chance again. ONION SETS, best Erie stock, qt ioc. PURE MAPLE SYRUP, (new goods) gallon SI.OO. COTOLENE, 50c pails, 45c. New invoice just arrived. BUTTER, Elgin Creamery, lb 29c. Excelled by none and equalled by few. GRANULATED SUGAR,best quality lb. 6c. 251b bags $1.40. CORN OLA FLOUR, for Com Pan Cakes, Corn Bread and Muffins, ioc package. Try it. Ralston-Purvina Cereals. Remember you can make your poultry and dairy yard more profitable, by constantly using Pratts Food. Phone 6. ar. H. DAY. 1 SPRING HAS COME"! As spring opens everyone desires to have something fresh from their own garden as early as possible and FRANK SHIVES' is the vary place to buy the best seeds of all.kinds, both early and late varieties. A full lino of choice Clover, Timothy, Orch ard Grass, Red Top and Lawn Grass in sea son. Also Millet and Hungarian Grass. Then his choice Hams, Bacon, Fresh Meat and Eggs deserve your attention. A few words about our Groceries and staple articles will not be out of place. Our Coffees and Teas can be relied on as always fresh. Sugars and Spices that will always please the thrifty housekeeper, while Canned Goods in bvery variety are presented for you to choose from. The freshest goods always to be found here. Pricea reasonable and quality the best. Sole agent for Pillsbury flour, which is known the world over as the best. I I | FRANK SHIVES. iWe Have I | What You Need! To brush up and make beanti | ful your home. The season of the : year for sucli work has arrived and we would call the attention of the public to our very large and reliable line of Paints, Oils, j Varnishes, the best in the world, iln addition to the best paints, we have a first-class line of De Voe & Co.'s Brushes. Get a : move on and be prepared to paint before the workmen are all en gaged. We can save you money. While you are painting your , home or business place let us ; talk a little with you 011 Bath S and Closets, Hot Water, Steam lor anything in that line. Our i increased facilities and expert [ workmen will do you good work, j Don't delay until too late. Farmers should bear in mind that we handle Plows, Harrows, 1 Rakes, etc. 111 fact our Hard ware, Stove and Plumbing De ; partments are up to the best. Write or wire us, when a com | petent agent will call on you. lifSCepiiHo.
Significant historical Pennsylvania newspapers