Cameron County press. (Emporium, Cameron County, Pa.) 1866-1922, September 18, 1902, Page 5, Image 6

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    KM I'OIUUM
MILLING
PRICE LIST.
Emporium, Pa., Aug. 11, 1902. |
NEMOPUILA, per sack 20 I
Graham, " 60
Rye " 60'
Buckwheat, " !
Patent Meal., " 2°
Coarse Meal, per 100, 1
Chop Feed, }
Middlings. Fancy" 1 ™
Brail, 1 >•'
Corn, per bushel,
White Oa's. :»•••" bushel '***
Choice Clover Seed, 1
ChoiceTinmthy Seed. ! At Market Prices.
Choice Millet Heed.
Fancy Kentucky Blue< « rass, |
R.C. DODSON.
THE
Drudd Ist,
.t J D 7
KUCOUU'JI, I'A.
IS LOCATED IN THE CORNER STORE.
At Fourth anil Chestnut Sts..
K. C. I»OI»SON.
Telephone, 19-2.
LOCAL HEPARTMKNT.
PERSONAL (iOSSIP.
Contributions invited. That which you would
like to see in this department,let us know by pon
ta 1 card or letter, personally.
Miss Eva Leet is visiting in Buffalo.
Bert Chadwick, the wrestler, is visit
ing friends in Emporium, Pa.
Mrs. Gilbert Morse and Mrs. Ed.
Morse are visiting relatives at Costello.
Miss Collins is visiting the schools
of this section and incidentally work
up the Institute.
Miss Minnie Jkiurgelt returned to
Buffalo last week and resumed her
former position.
Stanley Smith, of Kushequa, came
wver last week to spend the winter
with his grandma Russell.
C. W. Shaffer, accompanied by his
wife and daughter, are visiting at
Akron, Mr. Shaffer's former home.
Miss Nellie Bryson, ot Ford City, Pa.,
is now employed as bookkeeper for the
Climax Powder Mfg. Company at this
place.
W. P. Darrah, editor of Renovo
Evening News, visited in town last
Saturday eve>' - j, and called on many
friends.
Mrs. T. P. More entertained pleasant
ly, last Thursday afternoon, in honor
of her sister, Mrs. W. K. Wright, of
Renovo, a number of her lady friends.
Ex-County Treasurer W. L. Thomas
returned from Mason Hill on Monday
with a fine team of horses, purchased
from C. W. Williams. They are beau
ties.
Miss Ethel Winward, of Boston,
Mass., who has been guest at the resi
dence of (ieo. Metzger, Sr., left for the
"Hub" on Saturday, after a delightful
visit here, where she made many warm
friends.
Rev. Robt. McCaslin, pastor of Pres
byterian church, has been absent from
town for several days aad returns this
week from Philadelphia, accompanied
by his invalid son Russell who is greatly
improved after two years treatment in
a private sanitarium.
Mr. and Mrs. Vodack have removed
to the Cunningham house on Costello
Avenue Hon. L. Taggart, of Em
porium, called on Austin friends Tues
day. Mr Taggart was one of Austin's
first business men, and since his re
moval from here he notices many
changes in our town.—Austin Auto
graph;
($jS~ ~ ~
, : MIXED IN TWO MINUTE'». T , , M ,
!l! Longman and Martinez |
111 -.(#s' PAINTS. s!
W'o ' - 'tn ; Gl. PURE LINSEED OIL AT 75c. • .56 Actual Cost Si.2ij l'er Gallon. Any buliding not \l
111 /r~™ ' I MAKtsi (iALLONSFOR ■■ • $2.26 painted will be tepainted at our expetwe. I|
•I, ] [ \v.; ; ; 112 ' 27 years..i sale. |i
1 s " kA -" 1 ' J]
% H. 5 LLOYD. J
Mrs. Mathew O'Byrne visited Cam
' eron on Monday.
Geo. Howard returned Tuesday from ;
. a visit at Shenandoah.
William McGee and wife are visiting j
old friends at Tunkhannock.
Mrs. Ella Kinkaid, of Johnstown, 1
Pa., is visiting her father at this place, j
Mrs. Bert Burrows and daughter left ,
this morning for Warren to join her
husband.
Miss Agnes Wade and niece Miss j
Hoag, of Sterling Run, visited in Em
porium on Wednesday.
A. 1). Gould, of Eldred, visited in
town yesterday botween trains, on his I
return from Atlantic City.
Mrs. John Wylie, of Beechwood, J
spent last Sabbath in town, the guest
of relatives. —St. Marys Gazette.
Mr. and Mrs. Henry Flederman, of i
St. Marys, were guests of their daugh
ter, Mrs. Ed. Blinzler, yesterday.
The many friends of Mr. D. W.
Felt will be pained to learn that he has I
been seriously ill for several days.
Miss Elizabeth Glaxner, of Empori
um, spent Sunday with Mr. and Mrs. :
Frank Brooder. Kane Republican.
Miss Helen Sweeny, of Indiana, Pa.,
has accepted a position as stenographer
with the Climax Powder Company !
here.
Mrs. W. B. Thompson and daughter, !
Dorthy, returned Monday from a two
weeks' visit with relatives and friends !
at Eldred.
Misses Grace and Bessie McCaslin j
entertain a number of their friends to
morrow (Friday) evening, at their
pleasant home on Fifth street.
Mrs. William Howard, of Williams
port, visited in Emporium last Satur
day, on her return from Ohio, where I
she was called on account of the death
of a sister.
E. L. Garrett, wife and daughter, ;
and Mrs. Rebecca Troup, of Ohristi-1
ana, Lancaster county, Pa., are guests
! ofDan'l Downey and family—the latter
named lady being Mr. Downey's sister.
T. V. Mulligan, of Williamsport was
calling on his Emporium friends on
Wednesday. Mr. M. is interested in ,
Ohio oil fields and is here to dispose of j
stock. The Company is strongly en- :
dorsed.
Smith Whitman, of Lumber, who is
engaged hauling coal to the Climax j
Powder works was in town yesterday, j
He is the gentleman who, at the late '
fire at the Climax works, succeeded in \
saving the team and getting them out of |
danger, even if he did have to run j
through barb wire fences.
Mrs. J. M. Seibert has returned from j
a visit with friends at Sinnemalioning. !
Miss Myrtle Olmsted, of Em- j
porium, has been visiting her cousin, j
Miss Clara Andrews, the past week I
H. J. Olmsted and wife have returned
from a two weeks visit with relatives
at Harrisburg, Emporium and Will
iamsport.—Coudorsport Democrat.
Most of the lumbermen and mill men
attended the circus yesterday, closing
the operations for the day.
The Buffalo and Susquehanna has
ordered '2OO coal cars of 80,000 pounds
capacity and one passenger coach from
Bareny & Smith all for January 1903,
delivery. The coal cars will measure
thirty-four feet long and nine feet wide.
The special equipment includes, Dayton
twin spring draft rigging, Magnus
Metal Company's brasses and Tower
couplers.—Ex.
Hermit Found Dead With Wealth in
his Pockets.
At Philipsburg Saturday morning
George S. Turner, an eccentric old man
who had lived as a hermit in a house
on Ninth street was found dead sitting
upon a chair in the middle of the
kitchen. The decomposed condition
of the body indicated that death had
occurred a week or ten days before the
body was found. The Ledger says on
his person was found a gold hunting
case watch and an open-face silver
watch, $331.13 in cash, S4OO in Clearfield
tire brick bonds, §IOO in Clearfield
borough bonds, sr,oo in Clearfield Water
company bonds, SSOO in Wallaceton
fire brick bonds;certiflcate of deposit in
County National bank S7OO, certificate
of deposit Clearfield county bank SI4OO.
Ito was childless but his wife survives,
confined, hopelessly mad, in an insane
asylum. Saveral brothers are also
living, the natural heirs to the brother's
wealth, which is said to reach §IO,OOO.
Oscar Mitchell of Clearfield, Turner's
attorney, took charge of the dead man
his effects.—Lock Haven Republican.
CAMERON COUNTY PRESS, THURSDAY, SEPTEMBER iB, 1902.
Interesting Condensations.
I Our total exports and import# last i
year figured up to §2,152,000,000. I
The London national gallery was 1
j visited last year by 478,346 persons. |
In Bolivia 12 peaks of the Cordilleras
| de la Pas rise to over 20,000 feet.
An Owosso man, who is stone blind, ;
| has just finished reshingling his house, j
Equador holds the record for vol- j
: canoes. Three of the twenty are active. |
| Kamshatka has many volcanoes, the j
only ones in Russia that are still active, j
The new battleship Mikasa, built for j
Japan in England, has a tonnage of j
j 15,200.
j Chicago society is agitated over the j
1 propriety of paying calls by telephone. 1
: Defective eyesight in many instances j
is attributed to the surroundings of |
city life.
Great quantities of coronation mem- j
, en toes are being shipped to England |
: from Japan.
Gentle tapping of a tambourine is re- |
quired to lull the Shah to sleep for his '
afternoon nap.
The highest mountains in the world j
next to the Himalayas are the Andes 1
; of South America.
Almost the whole of the crypt of St.
Paul's cathedral, London, is being used
1 for workshops.
A portrait of Martha Washington
j will adorn the eight cent postage stamp
| which will be issued next fall.
1 Four blast furnaces are to be erected
; in Cardiff, Wales and four in Middles
borough by a Philadelphia firm.
Parrots are usually vegetarians,
' though the Ivea parrots of New Zeland
have developed a fondness for sheep.
In addition to the water cure the dry
pepper cure was resorted to recently
j at the Girls'lndustrial home in Dela
ware.
A Russian journal runs a daily
column which is alleged to be edited by
an "invisible assistant" from the other
; world
So small is a working model of a
steamship made by a mechanic of
Frankfort-on-Maine that it will go into
a matchbox.
The historic bell cast at St. Peters
burg and sent to the Chicago world's
fair, lias been stolen from St. Vladi
; mer's Russian church.
The Vulcan Shipbuilding company,
of Stettin, has purchased a large piece
j of land near Otterndorf, where it will
| construct a new yard.
A run was made from Pittsburg to
New York—4:sß miles—without a stop
1 recently, the longest run of a passenger
I train 011 record.
Three hundred and fifty thousand
dollars was tlie amount lost recently
at Budapest by one young British
nobleman to another.
Alaskan Indians allege that up the
Porcupine river, 1,500 miles from Port
Yukon, there arc two petrified ships
lying stranded in the mountains.
The fact that the world's supply of
corks is much less than the demand lias
given rise to a new industry of collect
ing, cleaning and revamping corks.
Engineers and artificers for the
i French navy are to be trained on board
i an old transport which has been turned
i into a navy school ship at Bordeaux.
To protect their trade Irish manufac
j turers have resolved to prosecute any
j one selling Irish roll tobacco which is
not actually manufactured in Ireland.
In Mile End, Old Town, London, 211
per 1,000 husbands and 292 per 1,000
wives signed the marriage register with
a cross during 1900. Most of them
were foreigners.
A portrait of Captain Clark, who
made the wonderful trip from San
Francisco to Cuba with the battleship
Oregon, is being painted, to be placed
in the state capitol of Vermont.
Two Japanese youths, sent out by
their government to make a practical
study of trade, are at work in Lima
Peru, one in a grocer's shop and the
other in a siilc weaving establishment
Thirty thousand dollars was paid re
cently for a bronze statute of Hercules
at the concluding sale of the Bardini
collection in London. The total
amount realized by the entire collection
was $228,64.
Letter to <i. S. Allen.
Emporium, Pa.
Dear Sir:—The late president of the
j Croton liiver Bank, at Brewsters, N.
; Y., built the finest house in all that
I region, in 1884, and painted it with
| lead and oil at a cost of S4O0 —the house
cost §31,000.
In 1887—three years—he reprinted it
| with Devoe at a cost of §:!">0. In 1897
i this paint was in good condition.
Lead and oil, S4OO, three years,
j Devoe $l5O, ten years.
■ 83 F. \V. DKVOK & Co.
| P. S.—Murry & Coppersmith sell our
paint.
| West Branch Fire Brick Company.
Last Thursday's issue of the Renovo
Evening News contained an extended j
articleon this importantindustry,which j
is said to bo one of the best equipped j
fire brick plants in the State, employ- i
ing a large force of men and turning j
out first-class material. Mr. Chas. F. |
Barclay and Messrs. C. B. Howard Com- j
pany, of this county, are largely in-J
terested in the enterprise, Mr. Barclay |
being President of the Company
The News, in speakingof the officers of j
tho Company, has this to say in relation |
to Mr. Barclay, who is considered one j
of the best business men in this section j
of the State:
"Captain Chas. F. Barclay, of Sinna- j
mahoning, the President of the com
pany, is a gentleman known all over j
the state as one of the most honorable, !
public spirited and enterprising of the;
larger capitalists. Although he is |
wortli his million, Captain Barclay j
earned his money by perseverance, in- j
tegrity and an honorable regard for the j
rights of others, lie is interested in j
every enterprise in Cameron county of |
note, and made Sinnamahoning a I
thriving and hustling town; his lumber '
interests in this and other states are I
prodigious; in Seattle, Washington, ho
is connected with large lime stone
quarries and vast real estate deals; in
Mexico lie has big holdings in gold and
silver mines, and ouly recently he ac
quired two hundred million feet of
timber in Bradford county.
Captain Barclay is a broad man, a
big, pleasant, congenial, liberal minded
man who has endeared himself to every
person, and who has made a friend of
every man who has had the pleasure of
meeting him. In 1889, the year of the
big floods throughout the state, his
losses were such as to swamp an ordi
nary capitalist. It was a hard blow,
but Captain Barclay is used to hard
blows, his experience in tho war of the
Rebellion proving him to be a fighter.
Although only 58 years of age Captain
Barclay has gone thqpugh experiences
enough to kill an ordinary man. His
iron constitution, indomitable pluck,
and withal his polished, kindly, gentle
manly manners have made him a peer
among men In such men as he Am
erica has its bulwarks. Captain Bar
clay enlisted as a private in the 149 th
Pa , 2nd Buektails; he was a Libby,
Dansville, Macon, Savannah, Charles
ton and Columbia prisoner, and went
through those hells shattered in health
but with the same pluck and spirit that
: made him what lie is to-day—a man
among men, a fearless, gentle, popular
man."
Stomach Trouble.
" I have been troubled with my stomacl
for the past four yearn," says 1). L. Beach
of Clover Nook Farm, Greenfield, M;.ss
"A few days ago 1 was induced to buy ;
box of Chamberlain's Stomach and Livei
Tablets. 1 have taken part of them anc
feel a great ileal better. ' 11 you have
any trouble with your stomach try a bos
(il these Tablets. You are certain to be
pleased with the result. Price 25 cents,
| For sale by L. Taggart.
Zinc and Grinding Make
Devoe Lead and Zinc Paint, wear twice
as long as lead and oil mixed by hand.
Murry & Coppersmith sell our paint.
tr
FOK 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 S9OO. The
house is large, will accommodate two
families. Inquire of P. D. LEET, Em
dorium, Pa. 28-4t.
A Boy's Wild Hide For Life.
With family around expecting him to
die, and a son riding for life, 18 miles, to
get I)r. King's New Discovery for Con
sumption. Coughs aiid Colds, W. H.
Brown, of Leesville, Ind., endured death's
agonies from asthma, but this wonderful
medicine gave instant relief and soon
cured him. He writes: "I now sleep
soundly every night." Like marvelous
j cures of Consumption, Pneumonia,
! Bronchitis, Coughs. Colds and Grip prove
its matchless merit for all Throat and
I Lung troubles. Guaranteed bottles 50c
; and 81.00. Trial bottles free at L. Tag
' gart's drug store.
For a bilious attack lake Chamberlain's
i Stomach and Liver Tablets and a quick
cure is certain. For sale by L. Taggart.
Avoid serious results of kidney or
bladder disorders by taking Foley's Kid
ney Cure. L. Taggart.
SALESMAN WANTED—A man between 21 and
• 1 50 years of age to represent well established
wholesale firm. Experience not necessary.
Address E. M. BRYANT, Department S. 366 t«>
:)7tS Mt. Vernon Ave., Columbus, Ohio. 30-tt
SHSHSHSP c: SHS2
| Fobert j
| The Tailor!
l I
S Our FALL AND WINTER E
n] WOOLENS have Arrived. ft
s &
I I'or \
5j
3 Men's Wear !
ir
1 * &
(fl We offer all the )
$ ir
Li' nJ
5 Newest |
! Fabrics j
m Including BLACK and WHITE jjj
goods, CORONATION
CLOTHS and the
SCOTCH effects.
§ 6
$ We also have our usual [j
u] strong line of jjj
=| STANDARD 112
I GOODS. !
S &
in a
QJ if
5! All Work Guaranteed !!
E S
j J. L. FOBERT,
S , c
111 Emporium, Pa. n
01 u
aSHS ci5H5 HSSSHSISSHSHS
l " SHIRT WAISTS. ' I
To-day we shall begin a most interesting sale of ■
■ Woman's Shirt Waists. The waists are all well made and I
■of excellent quality. We have decided to close out our line I
I at a wonderful sacrifice and will sell all our remaining stock I
Hat 25c and 50c the waist. Worth double the money. Come
I and see this money saving event of the season.
STRAW MATS.
We have a large line of straw hats and our prices can-
I not be beat for lowness.
RAINY-DAY SKIRTS.
Our stock is comprised of all the latest styles and of
I 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
I assortment in this section. Prices very reasonable.
M. C. TUL IS.
| 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 very place to buy the best seeds of alljkinds, both early and
late varieties.
A full line of choice Clover, Timothy, Orch
ard Grass, Red Top and Lawn draws in sea
son. Also Millet and Hungarian Grass.
Then his choice Ilams, Bacon, Fresh Meat
and Kggs deserve your attention. A few
words about our Groceries and staple
articles will not be out of place. Our Coffees
and Teas can bo relied on as always fresh.
.Sugars and Hpices that will always please
the thrifty housekeeper, while Canned
< foods in every variety are presented for you
to choose from. The freshest goods always
to bo found here. Prices reasonable and
(lUttlity the best. Sole agent for I'illsbury
flour, which is known the world over as the
best.
FRANK SHIVES.
DAY'S
THE SATISFACTORY STORE.
PEACHES. PEARS, PLUMS, GRAPES
CAULIFLOWER, PEPPERS CELERY.
The season for preserving for
winter nse is at its height. Soon
peaches and Rartlet pears, plums
1 and some other desirable fruits
I
i will be a tiling of the past for
1 this season. Better get your
! orders in at once if you do not
I wish to be disappointed. Don't
! look for very cheap ftuit, that
! is if you want something nice.
I
This store will give you satis
| faction if you leave your order
I in time.
SPECIAL THIS WKEK,
FRIDAY AND SATURDAY
|2SC Packa K ( ' D«st, 20£
inP Bottle Blueing, large QP
lUU bottle, first quality, Ou
• 100 I>a °k a £ e * oo( *> JQ
I ISC Package .Matches, I2C
IOC Sl " s '"' Corn ' 8C
Best Granulated Sugar, lb. CP
25 lb. bag, $1.40. "w
If you are trying to reduce
your living expenses, these prices
will help you. All goods subject
to return, if not as represented and
satisfactory as such.
I
I
I
j Phono e. J. H. DAY
5