EMPORIUM MILLING COMPANY. PRICE LIST. Emporium, Pa., Dec. 23, 1902. NEMOPHILA, per sack »1 IS Felt's Fancy, " 1 30 Pet Grove, " 1 30 Graham, " SO Rye - 60 Buckwheat, " 75 Patent Meal. " 50 Coarse Meal, per 100, 1 35 Chop Peed,.... ..." 135 Middlings, Fancy " 1 35 Bran, 1 15 Corn, per bushel, 75 White Oals.uer bushel, IS Choice Clover Seed, "I ChoiceTimothySeed, At Market Prices. Choice Millet Seed. I Fancy Kentucky BlueOrass, ) R.C. DODSON, THE Qrucjcjist, KMrnRIVM, PA. IS LOCATED IN THE CORNER STORE. At Fourth and Chestnut Sts.. h. c. uodsom. Telephone, 19-2. LOCAL DEPARTMENT. PERSONAL UOSSIP. Contributions invited. That which you would tike to see in this department Jet us know by pos tal card or letter, personally. L, R. Gleason and son, of Driftwood, were in town on Tuesday. Geo. Ritchie has been visiting his parents in town the past week. Miss Woodruff, of Olean, was guest of Miss Etta Spence over Sunday. G. S. Wiley and family, of Galeton, spent a few days in town this week. J. H. Evans, proprietor of Sizer Springs Hotel was in town Wednesday E. M. McFadden of Cameron was transacting business in town Wednes day. Miss Alice Montgomery will return this week from visiting friends at Lebanon. Mr. Josiah Howard, who has been quite ill for some days, is slowly re covering. George Leavitt, one of Shippen's successful schools teachers was a PRESS visitor on Monday. Miss Brooks, of Sinnemahoning, is visiting at the home of Mr. and Mrs. David Fulton.—Renovo Record. Mrs. Isaac Wykoff, of Cameron, was doing shopping in town on Tuesday and made the PRESS a short visit. Mrs. Harry Ness, of Bellevue, Pa., has been visiting her brother R. H. Hirsch and other friends in town the past week. J. S. Vail, formerly of this place, but now operator for New York Central at Jersey Shore, orders the PRESS sent to his address. Mrs. Chas. Deihl and daughter, of Portland Mills, are visiting Mrs. Deihl's parents, Geo. J. Laßar and wife at this place. Henry G. Seger, of Chicago, 111., stopped off in Emporium Saturday and Sunday to visit his parents and shake hands with his many friends While at work at the furniture fac tory last Friday, Bennett Leutze had the misfortune to get his first finger and thumb on his left hand badly cut. R. C. Moore was called to Elmira last week on account of the death of his brother John a former resident of this place. A letter has just been received from John Waddington, who is visitihg his grandparents in England, says he ar rived safe and had a very pleasant voy age. Miss Celia Pelky, of California, who has been visiting her brother T. J. Lysettand family at this place, will soon leave for Elmira, where she will visit her sister Mrs. Londregan. A. F. Andrews, J. H. Day's ener getic clerk, is somewhat under the weather this week, and confined to his home. Alton Housler is assisting in the the store during his illness The friends and acquaintances of Rev. and Mrs. Walter Readett now of Ransomville, N. V., but recently of this place, will be pleased to learn that a little son wan born to their family Saturday morning, January 17. Rev. Readett ser\< <1 the Cameron charge in the Wesleyan Methodist Church, hav ing his residence in Rich Valley four vears. John McDonald, an Arksill jobber, I has been stopping at the City Hotel for several days. C. W. Shaffer left yesterday on a business trip to Kentucky, to be absent several days. Rev. Metzler returned yesterday from York, Pa., whore he visited with friends for two or three days. Mrs. E.O. Bardwell, accompanied by her mother and sisters enjoyed a sleigh ride to Austin last Tuesday. Mtb. Dan'l Kriner, who resides on Whittemorc Hill, presented her hus band, last Thursday, with the eighth son—all living. Mine host Dolan, of City Hotel, is rejoicing over the arrival of a beautiful little daughter at his home Of course the boys all smoked good cigars. James Norie is celebrating the ar rival of a bouncing twelve pound boy at his home on Sixth street. The young lad made his advent on Tues day. Mrs. C. H. Sage entertained some twenty ladies last Friday afternoon at a pleasant card party given as a kindly remembrance to Mrs. E. O. Aldrich who is removing to St. Marys.—Johnson burg Press. Eye Specialist. Prof. W. H. Budine, the well known Eye Specialist, of-Binghamton, N. Y., will be at R. H. Hirsch's jewelry store,Emporium,Pa ,February 13th and 14th. If you can't see well or have headache don't fail to call and see Prof. Budine, as he guarantees to cure all such cases. Lenses ground to fit all kinds of sight. Eyes tested and ex amined free. All work guaranteed. The third entertainment of the Y. M. C. A., held the bords at the Opera House last Wednesday evening It was a concert given by the famous Chicago Glee Club. The Courier uses the word "famous" for it now appre ciates the fact the Club is entitled to such a distinction. The Chicago Glee Club is without doubt the best Male Quartet that has visited Coldwater in years.—Coldwater, (Mich.,) Courier. Peoples Course, Court House Saturday evening Jan. 31st. Men have various ways of earring money. Butchers, millers and bakers carry it in a crumpled wad. Bankers in nice clean bills laid full length in a morrocco pocket book. Brokers always fold there bills once, doubling the monej as it where. The young busi ness man carries it in his vest pocket while the sporting man carries it in his trouser's pocket. Farmers and drovers carry theirs in their inside pockets, whether it be fifteen dollars or fifteen cents. Editors usually carry theirs in other people's pockets. Pat Huxley Once More in Trouble. Pat Huxley broke loose again Thurs day night. Pat has been keeping pretty quiet lately but it seems that periodically the police must look after him. Huxley has been annoying a woman who resides on State street by atten tions which were unwelcome to her. On Thursday night she appealed to the police and several of them went on his trail. He saw them coming and made himself scarce. In the early morning hours Huxley returned and again the police were called. Officer Thompson, who re sponded, found the woman in the street and the doors locked. The offi cer could hear Huxley on the inside and forced a window to secure en trance. Taking a lamp he made a search of the house but failed to find him. In one spot he found an entrance to an attic but it was closed. The house is one of a row and all are connected in this attic. Thompson drew himself up through the trap door taking the lamp with him. He heard Huxley at the other end of the long open space and started after him. He found that the fugitive had taken advantage of the hole open ing down into the adjoining house, and descending into a bedroom, where sev eral persona were sleeping. Of course he aroused the slumberers and their fears were not allayed in the least when they saw the long legs of the stalwart officer come dangling through the opening in the ceiling a few sec onds afterward. Huxley ran down stairs and effected his escape through a front door. When the officer reached the street, his man had disappeared from sight. So far as is known he mai be running yet.— Williamsport Bul.etin. Advertising and Combination. "The cessation of advertising killed the bicycle business," says Colonel A. A. Pope, "and the way to revive it is to resume that same important matter. You can see how I feel in the matter when I tell you that I spent $500,000 in one year in that sort of publicity, and that it is my idea for the future to ad vertise." The Bicycle Trust stopped competition, and it s>ipi>osod it did not need publicity. It saved a great deal of money and went into the hands of a receiver. Colonel Pope knows the bicycle business better than any one else does and h<< says there must be a return to advertising. When the bicy cle manufacturers ceased to advertise the public abandoned cycling and turn ed to other amusements. CAMERON COUNTY PRESS, THURSDAY, JANUARY 29, ioo> ALL SORTS. With Bometbihg over 7,200 pages oftestimony transcribed, the anthracite strike commission is fast nearing the end of its labors, and it is thought that all evidence will be in by the last of this week. A Canton giri is lucky enough to have | become head nurse at SSO weekly in the service of a New York multi millionaire, who is a partial paralytic She is also, to have a bonus of SI,OOO yearly as long as she continues in her rich patient's service. The following from the German is equally true in English: At 10, a boy thinks he knows more than his father. When he is 15 he thinks, "Well, I know just about as much." At 20 he thinks he knows again as much. When he comes to be 30 years old he thinks that he ought to ask his lather's advice some times. At 40 he thinks that his father does know a little more. At 50 he looks for his father's advice. At 00, when his father is dead, he comes to the conclu sion that there was not a smarter man on God's earth than his father was. The Pennsylvania Railroad will pay full wages, for the time lost, to all of its employes wh», as members of the National Guards, were called away from work by the coal strike. These employ ees of course were paid by the state al - so for the time they were in active ser vice, and so they will get double pay for that period. This action by the ; railroad company is a practical counter- j move to the action of labor union in declaring against membership in the guard. The company's policy will do ! much to increase the attractiveness of service in the National Guard. A western editor writes as follows: ' The editor sat in his easy chair, light ] ing his pipe on his anburn hair. A halo shown over his face so fair, but his 1 knees were out and his feet were bare. ( And he sang a song both sad and sweet ! while the flies died all around his feet, 1 for he had no grub in his shop to eat, i and the ground was covered with sleet. I Now, what in the world was the cuss to j do? He had eaten the paste and swal lowed the glue; he hadn't a drink, he ] hadn't a chew, and while he stared his j wiskers grew.—And the band played . on. When the frost is on the window and ' the kitchen pail is froze, when the little ' icy needles come from every breath I that blows, when chilblains make us sick and faint, and cold feet give us pain; it's safe to bet that we all wish for summer days again. For while we sit and fume around in gauzy summer clothes, it's easy enough to get cooled everybody knows; but it's different in the winter when the world is full of ice; and the weather is as hard as a pair o loaded dice. We may talk about our I climate, and about our spring and fall, j but the balmy days of summer are the j days that suit us all.-—Ex. The happiest man in the world is the ! common every day chap who makes his own living, pays his own bills and has I the respect of his neighbors. He saves ! a little money as he goes along, but he , doesn't try to get a corner on the local output, and he is a slave to neither am- j bition or society. He never expects to ! wear out the seat of his pants in the ', senate, and when he slides into bis clothes in the morning he never wastes anytime trying to pick out the right tint of soaks, suspenders, and neckties that will blend with the general effect. He wears a "biled" shirt when he feels like it, and when his pet corn begins to jump he whips out his jack knife and cute a four inch gash in the side of his boot and nothing is said about it in the papers. He has an appetite like a cy clone and he never has to sit up nights to poulticohia conscience. He believes in the doctrine live and let live, and when he encounters one of the needy doesn't stutter with his pocket book. The plain plug of a man is happy be cause he is satisfied and doesn't Bpend the best part of his life in yearning for something about four sizes to large for him. —Ex. Tariff or no tariff, reciprocity or no reciprocity, both countries seem to be doing pretty well as things are. Canada sells millions' worth abroad, and with these millions buys American goods, because they are better and cheaper than she can make or get elsewhere. We boy a little of Canada, too, and the duty paid thereon goes to support the general government. Even should Canada become twice as prosperous she would still be our best custom er.—Detroit Journal. I ! 11: : 1 I I; I o Sporting Goods at O | | 112 HARRY S. LLOYD'S | __ _ | 1 _ )r __ 3 £ $ The Proposed Lee Statue. I The Harrisburg Telegraph very pro perly says: It is not likely that the proposition to place a statue of General Lee on the battlefield of Gettysburg will be adopted. The chances are that a storm of protest will sweep the pro position into oblivion, j In this matter it is neither necessary nor advisable to resurrect sectional differences nor even to mention, much j lees wave, the bloody shirt. The j scheme is distasteful to many Penn | sylvanians. As a soldier General Lee j had few peers. In the strict military sense his career was a glorious one. As 1 a soldier his statue would be desirable I anywhere. But Lee the soldier can never be dis sociated from Lee the traitor. It's a pity but it's true. The animosity be tween the two sections that were en gaged in the great struggle forty years : ago has died. The Blue and the Gray ! fraternize whenever they meet. The J aspirations of the North and the South j are now similar. Yet in the manifesta tion of fraternal spirit there is a line which cannot be passed in safety. To honor Lee would be to glorify treason. In sentiment this may not be true; in the real and practical side of human life it is nothing but truth. There arc many Pennsylvanians who to-day see a monument to Lee in every shaft to soldiers slain at Gettysburg and in every orphans' school that was j erected as a consequence and effect of that general's military genius. It is not possible that any convincing reason can be advanced for honoring the memory of the dead rebel. It is advis able that the proposition be dropped. Wonderful Nerves. Is displayed by many a man enduring 1 pains of accidental Cuts, Wounds, j Bruises, Burns, Hcalds, Sore feet or stiff joints. But there's no need for it. Buck len's Arnica Salve will kill the pain and cure the trouble. It's the best Salve on earth for Piles, too. 25c. at L. Taggart's Druggist. D A Y'S THE SATISFACTORY STORE. CAROLINA RICE, LB. BC. CELERY SEEDED RAISINS, LB. IIC. LETTUCE CLEANED CURRENTS, LB. IOC CRANBERRIES. (Quality is the first considera tion at this store, price second ary. People are willing to pay a reasonable price for a good article and know they can get it here. Better things at often times less cost. WE OFFER SPECIAL FRIDAY AND SATURDAY. ELGIN CREAMERY BUT TER, Lb. 32c. Always reliable. MACCARONI, Lb. 12c, genuine imported. EGG NOODLES, 10c pkg Bc. OREGON PRUNES, Lb. 6c. 5 lbs 25c. Small size fine frnit. BAKED BEANS, large can Bc. With or without tomato sauce. QC Lb. Bag Sugar frl /ft Best Granulated. vKHU TfA Occasionally we hear the I LH remark —from someone out of town —It is hard to get any good teas in this town. Never, however, from patrons of this store. That difficulty may always be overcome here. We believe we give better values, too. Green Teas 25c to 90c lb. Black Teas 50c. to 75c. lb. TRY JAMAKA COFFEE, a 25c coffee at 22c. ph...., J H. DAY ■~-r 1 c\ Glass of Water. Put a handful cA glowed faSffiu cojfte in a glmsof water, > motM wash off the coating, JbHk look at it; smell itl Fa m it fit to drink? Give filim COFFEE the same teat. It leaves the water In bright and clear, because it's jutt Pf pure coffee. TheMiled pack*** Inttimuniform quality and frashnosa. , fITT fin A ear* guaranteed If 70a ass ■ PILES ru^e Supposltoryl I>. Matt. Thompson, Runt. B Graded School*, Statesrille, N. C„ writes : •' ( ran say H th««y do all you claim for I hem." I>r. 8. If. Devon:, H Haven Rock. \V. Va., write* • •• They jive universal satis- BO faction." I>r. H. I>. llcGill, Clarksburg. Tenn., writra: I 1 4 In 1 practice of 2S year*. I have found no rem*!? to H } equal jours." Pan t, 50 Cairn. Sample* Free. Sold ■ by M«RTIH RUDY. L»NC»«TCW. PA | Sold inEmporium by L. Taggart and R. C. Dodson. Call for free sample. One Minute Cough Cure For Coughs, Colds and Croup. SHSHSaSH SHSHSasrS SHSHSHSS SHS"c£SHBd £."HSHSP TO SHSP S3 51^ & The History by Miss Ida M. Tarbell which began in the J™ | NOVEMBER McCLURE'S is the | Great Story off Standard Oil I "Miss Tarbell's work is of unequalled importance as a 'document' n] ill of the day. Her story has livo men in it; they suffer and work and win Ln and lose their battles with the verisimilitude that removes the tale from Hj l/i the dry statement and clothes it with the color of human interest and }{] W the vivid rainbow garmet of human sympathy. * * * The results of ru }{| her work are likely to be far-reaching; she is writing unfinished his- In tory."—Boston Globe. [n fjj "An absorbing and illuminating contribution to the trust ques- ru sj tion."—Chicago Inter-Ocean. f{] "The most important announcement made by any magazine."—N. [}{ pj Y. Jouranal. U] ft For other great features of IQO3 [}j send for our prospectus jj] I McClure's 1 Hi 10 cents a copy, SI.OO a year. Send us the dollar, at 145 East 25th [j] nj Street, New York, or subscribe through your dealer. 11 i i 11 i i i i i r -1 Si® il ii ink - Is when you step into our store to buy your supplies for the family larder. _____ We have the quality of goods that "taste like more," and at prices that gives you a chance to buy more, and a ____ larger variety than at any other grocery. ____ Groceries of all descriptions, Maple Syrup, Sauer Kraut, Buckwheat Flour —— and Pillsbury's Best Flour, Butter, ——- Eggs, Cheese and Vegetables of all kinds. We can supply your wants for the holidays, both in groceries, meats and ____ poultry. Our market is stocked with _____ Turkeys, Ducks, Chickens and all ' kinds of Meats —fresh and juicy. _____ Mince-meat, Sausage and Smoked ____ Meats constantly on hand. Prices the lowest, quality considered. Come in —— and convince yourself \\itli a trial order. Everything must be satisfac- tory or money refunded. FRANK SHIVES. J. J T T pj— J 1 G.SCHMIDTS,^ G.SCHMIDTS,^ HD.nniiiDTFPS FOR FRESH BREADi A Popular P "" cv^ EAM yilTC * CONFECTIONERY Daily DGliV6r v All orders given prompt and skillfulattention. CENTRAL State Normal School, LOCK HAVEN, PA. J. R. FLICKINGFR, A. M., Sc. D., Principal. vQPjv""'" , '""" i " jjj " V '' :^ Spring term opens April Oth, 190?. Offers lreo tuition to prospective teachers. This institution is one of the foremost Normal Schools of the state. Has the handsomest and most modern buildings, a well educated faculty, and a beautiful location. It also offers excellent courses in Music, Elocution, Shorthand, and has an excellent college preparatory Department. Expenses absolutely lower than in any other in stitution of equal rank. Addresß, for illustrated catalog. The Principal. 49-3t Kodol Dyspepsia Cure Digests what yo u oat.
Significant historical Pennsylvania newspapers