EMPORIUM MILLING COMPANY. PRICE LIST. Emporium, Pa., Aug. 11, 1902. NEMOPini-A, per sack *1 20 Mrahatn, " 60 Rye " 60 Buckwheat. " Patent Men!. " 50 Coarse Men I. per 100, 1 SO Chop t-'eod, " 1 50 Middlings, Fancy'• 1 50 Bran, 1 15 Corn, per biMhel, 84 White Oats, per bushel, 18 Choice Clover Seed, "1 GhoiceTimothySeed, j At Market Prices. Choice Millet Seed. Fancy Kentucky Blue Grass. I R. C. DODSON, THE Ordcjcj Ist, KHPOimiM, IVY. IS LOCATED IN THE CORNER STORE. At Fourth and Chestnut Sts.. r, ' 1 H. C. DODHON. Telephone, 19-2. LOCAL DEPARTMENT. ! PERSONAL GOSSIP. Contributions invited. That which you would \ like to sec in thin department^et us know by pot• • /al card or tetter, personally. I Allen Baldwin, of Emporium, was | doing business here Tuesday.—Austin ! Autograph. Miss Hattie Shaffer, of Sinnemalion ing, was guest of A. H. Shaffer and j family Friday and Saturday of last j week. E. C. Davison came down from John sonbnrg 011 Sunday and visited with j his family until Monday. lie is pleased with his new position. Mrs. F. S. Coppersmith and children, i went to Arcade, N. Y., on Tuesday, to visit their cousin and family. Frank j goes over on Saturday to spend Sun day. Frank Farrill, wile and daughter, of Susquehanna, Pa., arrived in Em porium last Saturday to spend a few ; days with S. G. Ostrum and family on : Bryan Hill—Mrs. Farrill being Mrs. j Ostrum's sister. N. Cutler, wife and child of Sizer- j ville were guests at the Hotel Connolly i yesterday Miss Grace Leighton, who was quite ill at Emporium last week, is now on the mend, and is at the home of her sister, Mrs. A. J. Con- ; nolly—Port Allegany Argus. Mr. S. IL llenninger and wife have i commenced housekeeping in Mrs. Rockwell's block. Mr. Renninger, who is a member of the firm of Ward & Renninger, paper wood contractors, is a very pleasant gentleman and suc cessful. E. C. Davison, who succeeded Mr. i Considine here as agent for the P. & 12 , [ has already taken up his new duties. He is a pleasant gentleman to meet, and the Press feels he will be a worthy successor to Mr. Considine. He is at present staying at The Armstrong.— Jolinsonburg Press. Mies Jesse McCain, one of the class of 1902, St. Marys High School, has been elected to a school in Shippen township, Cameron county Prof. A. L. L. Suhrie, ex-principal of our schools, who has been spending the past month at the Lake-Side Assembly, Findley Lake, N. Y., returned to St. Marys Saturday evening to attend to some business affairs in town. Ho will return to Findley to attend to some correspondence for Dr. Byron W. King during the next two weeks.—St. Marys Gazette '{J MIXED IN TWO MINUTE!'. 7 , l hjt i| £ - - Longman and Martinez a '" ■ ■ «... PAINTS. :' 'I 1 '' 'f •' 6 «- PU "E UNSEED OIL AT 75c.. .56 Actual Cost #1.29 Per Gallon. Any building not l' ' ! U'rr* ■' ' ~'i ' MAKESI, CALLONSFOR ...$2 26 • salisfactor f il y i painted will be tepainted at our expense. |]« ! i 1 112 \ 37 yearsof sale. ,1 111 J J f/\ V, Sole Agent, 1 H ' S ' LIjOYB - J J. O. Brookbank, of Driftwood, was I a visitor in town last evening. Mrs. H. M. Dodge, of Walnut street, ■ has been quite ill the past week. W. R. Sizer, of Sizerville, was tran sacting business in town yesterday. B. W. Green, Esq., is on a business trip to Wisconsin, expecting to return home on Sunday. Mrs. S. L. Stoddard and grand-child ren, Ueiland Leona Coppersmith, were PRESS visitors 011 Tuesday. Mrs. Geo. P. Jones and Miss Jetfcie Wiley gave a whist yesterday after noon to their lady friends. Miss Anna Metzger left last Sunday for Lynchburg, Va., where she accepts a position in a music school E. J. Smith and family, of Sixth street, left on Tuesday, to spend two weeks with relatives in Mass. W. S. Walker was over from Austin yesterday, visit! g his parents and friends and transacting business. Mrs. Laura Bryan entertained a large party of lady friends at her resi dence 011 Broad street, last Saturday. Mr. Fred A. Johnson, law student in the oflice of his father, Hon. J. C.John son, was a brief caller at PRESS sanc tum 011 Tuesday. Mrs W. L. Sykes and daughters, Misses Ruth and Grace, of Galcton, Pa., are guests of the former's parents, i Judge Walker and family. Dan'l Webster, of East Ward, made his usual visit to the PRESS yesterday and earned away our autograph for another year's subscription. Misses Maggie Montgomery and Carrie Pye, accompanied by the form er's brother, John Montgomery, took in the sights at Toronto Niagara Falls and Buffalo last week. Mrs. Paul S. Smith who has been with Minnelli Bros. & Donaldson Stock Co., all summer returned home Mon- 1 day from Sidney, O. Mr. Smith will return in a couple of weeks. Master Whiteley Howard entertain ed a large party of his lady and gentle men friends 011 Tuesday, the occasion being his sixth birthday. Of course they all enjoyed the occasion. Miss. Edith Olmsted leaves the 13th, of this month for Jamestown, where < she will receive a ten month's course ' of vocal instruction from Mrs. E. W. Stevens.—Coudersport Democrat. Hon. C. A. Mayer, who held special court here yesterday is very greatly improved in health and looks as fresh as he did years ago. Many of his friends called on him during his stay in town. J. W. Frank, of Florida, who has been visiting here for several days, guest of B. W. Green and family, left last Sun day to visit his daughter Mettie in Mass. He departs for the South next Sunday. Mr. Frank evidently enjoy ed his visit here. Clias. E. Simpson, of Eldred, Pa., ! formerly a resident of this county re- ; members the PRESS and pushes the date ahead at the same time saying ! "we do not care to do without the 1 PRESS." We are always pleased to hear from former Cameronites. Mr. and Mrs. Bert Felix and Mrs. Aaron Burrell, of Shamokin, Pa., are the guests of R. P. Bingeman and family 011 West Fifth street. We are sorry to learn that Mrs. Bingeman's health is very poorly and hope she will get better in the near future. Conductor Buck, who was so serious ly injured in the wreck at Sterling Run a little over a year ago, expects togo to work about the iirst of October. Mr. Buck has had a pretty tough time of it. Both legs were broken in two places and one shoulder was broken.—Kane Republican. Alonzo R. Moore, of Coudersport, referee in Bankruptcy, was transacting business in Emporium on Monday in oonnection with Mankey Manufactur ing Company. Mr. Moore is the Re publican candidate for Legislature, and in connection with his legal duties has his hands full. W. L. Dixon, of Britton Hill, was a PRESS visitor yesterday and deposited a large package of delicious apples, i grown upon his farm—a gift to ye editor from his good wife. Mr. Dixon has some very large tomatoes and cucumbers in his garden—the former weighing l| pound and the latter measuring 151 x 13;.. Mr. Dixon, in addition to his farm is quite successful j in a mining a coal vein 011 his laud, sup ! plying his customers as rapidly as he can mine the same. CAMERON COUNTY PRESS, THURSDAY. SEPTEMBER n, 1902. Jay Pelt, of Philadelphia, who iH I visiting his parents and friends in , town, was a PRESS visitor on Tuesday, j Mrs. W. 11. Wright, of Renovo, is ! guest of her sister, Mrs. T. F. More ! on Sixth street. Miss Sallie McMurrow, of New York 1 City, is guest of B. W. Green and i family, on Sixth street. Miss Lillian Heilman has retired from Climax office, where she has been em -1 ployed as bookkeeper for several months. Frank Hall, of St. Marys, visited in Emporium last evening, guest at the | Wiley residence. Mr. Hall was enroute for the i-hilippines accompanying Gen'l Miles. Avoid serious results of kidney or bladder disorders by taking Foley's Kid ney Cure. IJ. Taugart. An exchange gives the following re cipe for scandal: "To a little suspicion add a grain of falsehood, an ounce of gad-about, and a like quantity of limber tonguo, a handful of backbite and a tablespoon of 'l'll tell if you promise not to tell it,' putin a few drops of envy mixed with jealousy, and stir well, after which strain through a bag of miscon . struetion, then pour into a meddlesome bottle and hand it to any gossip for distribution. The Cambridge Springs Enterprise gives the following advice to its read ers. Its good and applicable to every city and town in the country: "Every citizen should believe in the town he lives in, and if he doesn't think it is a little better in most re spects than neighboring towns than he should move out. When away from home, do not neglect to give those with whom you come in contact to under stand that you live in a live town popu lated by enterprising, go ahead, pro gressive people, and one that is ad vancing instead of retrograding. "If you can truthfully speak in com- ' mendation of the ability of yonr pro-' fessional men, the square dealing meth- j ods of your merchants, the superiority j of your schools, etc., let nothing pre vent you from exercising that priv- j ilege. It will not be necessarv to men- i tion tho drawbacks if there are any, j Strangers seeking a location are always ! greatly influenced in favor of any place j where the citizens are enthusiastic in i its praise. "Unless its inhabitants appreciate j the excellence and virtues of each other and will collectively spread aboard their faith in the prosperity and future 1 greatness of their own locality no city 1 or town can expect to attain promi- | nenceover its rivals. When rightly ; utilized, talk can be made effective in ! many directions, and this is one of j them." Letter to Keystone Powder Co. Emporium, Pa. Dear Sirs: H. M. Hooker & Co., j Cooperstown, N. Y., have sold Devoe ! | paint for 42 years. D. T. McGown, of j | that firm, built a house in'Bs and paint- j ed Devoe, of course. The paint lasted 1 ten years. A year or two later, a neighbor built I a house, and painted it lead and oil. ' ! The neighbor's house was repainted j | twice in the same time. | This looks as if tho neighbor's house ! I was painted three times in eight or ! nine years, and McGown's once in ten | j years. We are not quite sure—we tell j the tale as it comes to us. It is enough to say that Devoe lead and zinc lasts twice as long as lead and oil. 82 F. W. DEVOE & Co. P. S. —Murry & Coppersmith sell our I paint. A Boy's Wild liido For .Life. With family around expecting liiiu to die, and a son riding for life, 18 uiiles, to get Dr. King's New Discovery for Con sumption, Coughs and Colds, W. 11. Brown, of Lcesville, Ind., endured death's agonies from asthma, but this wonderful uicdicine gave instant relief and soon cured him. lie writes: "I now sleep soundly every night." Like marvelous cures of Consumption, Pneumonia, Bronchitis, Coughs, Colds and Grip prove its matchless merit for all Throat and Lung troubles. Guaranteed bottles 50c and SI.OO. Trial bottles free at L. Tag gait's drug store. It is risking something to ask the public to place a piece of fiction along- ' | fide of Poe's best work. The Editor of j j The Cosmopolitan ventures this in the j 1 following note, which appears in the Saptember issue: "Ono does not often find a story which seems to come in the classification of Edgar Allen Poe's best work. Yet one might be tempted to ask such a place for 'The Canonic Curse' which Arthur E. McFarlane contributes to Tho Cosmopolitan for September." Come and see the best Refrigerator ' The only good one on earth at Laßar's j A barrier against disease and better than drugs is SHAW'S PURE MALT. Sold By I 36-47-ly P. X. BLUMLE. J Grand nilitary Review. Pawnee Bill and bis hundreds of j mounted heroes are coming to visit us. Many additions have been made this year and now his famous Wild West is numbered among the big shows of the world. Detachments from tho armies of the world with a battery of artillery in dazzling military reviews is one of the many now features. The Juvenile Wild West for the children is an innovation that should startle and please all the little folks. Coming to Emporium. Wednesday, Sept. 17, 1902. FOB SALE— Residence of Mrs. Bupp, ou sth street, Emporium, Pa., lot 50x 110, with barn and other out buildings; centrally located; one-half block from courthouse and midway between school houses;—three minutes walk from upper and six minutes walk from lower rail road station. Rents for $lO 00 per month. Offered for §9OO. Tho house is large, will accommodate two families. Inquire of F. D. LEET, Em dorium, Pa. 28-4t. L-.XKCUTOR'N NOTICK. Estate of CATHERINE BEERS, Deceased. I ETTERS Testamentary to the Estate of 1 J Catherine Beers, late ol' Volusia County, Florida, deceased, having been granted to Joshua Pitt Felt, residing in the Borough of Emporium, County of Cameron and Stateof Pennsylvania, to whom all persons indebted to said estate are re quested to make payment, and those having claims or demands, will make known the same without delay. JOSHUA PITT FELT. GREEN & SHAFFER, Solicitors, Emporium, Pa., Aug. 18tli, 1902 . 26-6t NOTICE OK EXECUTRIX. Estate of HULDAH C. OENUXO, Deceased. IETTERS Testamentary on the Estate of Hul- J dah C. Uenung, late of Emporium Borough, Cameron county, Pennsylvania, deceased, have been granted to Hannah Eli/a Sebring, residing in said Borough, to whom all persons indebted to said estate are requested to make payment, and those having claims and demands, will make known the same without delay. HANNAH ELIZA SEBRINO, 1-xecutrix. QUEEN & SHAFFER, Solicitors. Emporium, Pa., August 23rd, 1902. 27-6t. District Court of the United States. Mid dle District of Pennsylvania. In the matter of l Mankey Manufacturing Co.. S In Bankruptcy, Bankrupt. ) No. 220. To the creditors of Mankey Manufacturing Co., in the county of Cameron and District afore said, a bankrupt: Notice is hereby given that on the 30th day of August, A. D., 1902, the said Mankey Manufac turing Co., was duly adjudicated bankrupt; and that the first meeting of their creditors will be held at the Court House, on the 26th day of Sep tember, A D., 1902, in Emporium. Pa., at 2 o'clock in the afternoon, at which time the said creditors may attend and prove their claims, ap point a trustee, examine the bankrupt and trans act such other business as may properly come be fore said meeting. A. R. MOORE, Referee in Bankruptcy. Coudersport, Pa., Sept. Bth, 1902 . 29-2t ; Consult s Your : - 8. & 5 Interests. > AND SAVE BIG MONEY 5J BY ORDERING NOW | YOUR FALL SUIT | jjj R. SEGER & | COHPANY'S. jW We handle nothing but fa g the very best fabrics and H " on this together with first- M sj class fit and workmanship r| N we have built up the H NI large patronage we enjoy. uj is Come in and see us. pj R. SEGER & CO. \j Opposite M. E. Church. HI A/ /■/ /./ Kodol Dyspepsia Cure Digests what you eat. Foley's honey and Tar for children,safe,sure. No opiates. I Fohprf r jg "UUI t | THE SATISFACTORY STORE. S ToilAT) r GRAPE NUTS ' CHAMPAGNE IU Id 111) I S:" FORCE " FOOD - WAFERS, | 111 V lUllVl jfl maltavita RECEPTION - - - CJ NABISCO WAFERS, FLAKES. $ Our FALL AND WINTER The season for replenishing S WOOLENS have Arrived. | the lardcr with good thillgs for m [n ie ' on £ winter clays, is here. n] , This store aims to supply your Iji r°r nj . 11 j J nj in ; wants with goods that will al io * j vvj ways satisfy. You may possibly I Men s Wear n] [n j fruit, but you will find it econo my We offer all the jj my in the end. If you have $ |j] never dealt with us, at least [0 'VT 1 nJ come in and examine our stock 1 Newest |i- • I Fabrics |j_ in srec ""- $ ' a S FRIDAY AND SfITUROAY ffi Including BLACK and WHITE S goods, CORONATION g| F SI.IO CLOTHS and the Ci Hour that has not failed to uj nj i give satisfaction. SCOTCH effects. [jj! SWEET POTATOES, ordered es fjj In pecially for this sale. Best OTP §Wc also have our usual | Virginia sweets, peck, /Ob strong line of jjj j COTTOLENE, regular 50c i STANDARD J ! TAPIOCA '*"■*• In " , " k ' lb - 5C LT rnnnc n BEANS, large can, QP UUUUv. [n with or with tomato sauce Ob ru Best Granulated Sugar, lb. CP K n] 25 lb. bag, 81.40. Du J/j All Work Guaranteed H ru I J. L. FOBERT, | uj Emporium, Pa. nJ | j Phone 6. J. H. DAY I Midsummer sie I SHIRT WAISTS. To-day we shall begin a most interesting sale of Woman's Shirt Waists. The waists are all well made and of excellent quality. We have decided to close out our line at a wonderful sacrifice and will sell all our remaining stock at 25c and 50c the waist. Worth double the money. Come and see this money saving event of the season. STRAW HATS. We have a large line of straw hats and our prices can not be beat for lowness. RAINY-DAY SKIRTS. Our stock is comprised of all the latest styles and of best quality of goods in the market. Prices very low. We also have a nice line of muslin underwear. FLOOR COVERINGS. Carpets, Mattings, Linoleums and Oilcloths, the largest assortment in this section. Prices very reasonable. M. C. TULIS. 1 SPRING HAS COME j As spring opens everyone desires to have something fresh from their own garden as early as possible and FRANK SHIVES' is the very place to buy tho best seeds of alljkinds, both early and late varieties. A full line 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 bo out of place. Our Coffees and Teas can be relied on as always fresh. .Sugars and Spicos that will always please the thrifty housekeeper, whilo Canned Goods in every variety are presented for you to choose from. The freshest goods always to be found hero Prices reasonable and iiuality tho best. Hole agent for l'tllsbury tiour, which is known tho world over as the best. FRANK SHIVES. 5