KM PORIUM MILLING COMPANY. PRICE LIST. Emporium, Pa., March 27,1903. NEMOPHILA, per sack |1 15 Pelt's Fancy, " 1 80 Pet Grove, " 130 Graham, " 60 Rye " 60 Buckwheat " 65 Patent Meal. " 60 Coarse Meal, per 100 125 Chop l-'oed, '• 125 Middlings. Fancy " 125 Bran, 1 20 Corn, per bushel, "0 White Oats, per bushel 48 Choice Clover Seed, "I ChoiceTimothySeed, l At Market Prices. Choice Millet Seed, 112 Fancy Kentucky Blue Grass, | R.C. DODSON, THE Brucjcjist, F.MPORIVJI. PA. *S LOCATED IN THE CORNER STORE. At Fourth and Chestnut Sts.. R. C. DODSON. Telephone, 19-2. LOCAL DEPARTMENT. PERSONAL OOSSIP. Contribution* invited. That which you would like to nee in this department,let ua know by pot tal card or letter, remonallu. Mrs. R. Warner who has been quite sick for several days is somewhat im proved in health we are glad to note. Attorney S. W. Smith, of Port Alle gany, transacted business in town on Monday. Mr. Chas. Johnson of Sterling Run, was a business visitor at this office on Saturday. Thos. M. Lewis, of Sterling Run, was in town on Monday, and made us a pleasant call. Mrs. J. D. Logan and daughter Miss Mayme are both having a tussle with the grippe. Mrs. J. C. Lynch and sister Miss Delia Clair of Cameron were shopping in town last Saturday. Dan'l Coyle,of Cameron, an old time lumberman registered at the Com mercial Hotel on Tuesday. Mr. R. B. Whiting, of Sterling Run, was a visiter in Emporium last Satur day and while in town made the PRESS a business visit. Mr. Thos. Norris, accompanied by Dr. S. S. Smith left on Sunday for Buf falo where Mr. Norris will receive treatment at a hospital, we are inform ed. Alex. DeShetler, of Sinnam ahoning, was looking after business matters here on Saturday and found time to make the PRESS a short call. Geo. A. Walker, Jr., had the misfor tune to sprain one of his ankles, last week, while stepping from a buggy. He is now on crutches. Mrs. A. J. Seifried, of Cameron, who has been on the sick list for several days is much better at this writing, which will be good news for her many friends here. Geo. H. Crawford and sister Miss Myrtle stopped in Emporium on Mon day, enroute for Grantonia where Miss Myrtle will visit for some time. Miss Ruth Minick, a student at Dick inson Seminary, Williamsport, is en joying her Easter vacation with her parents and friends in this place.— Ridgway Advocate. Mrs. Chas. King and Mrs. A. O. Swartwood left on Tuesday for Smeth port to attend the funeral of their mother. Mrs. Mae Culver and Mr. Lewis Woodcock accompanied them. Mrs. Geo. H. Dickinson accompanied by Mr. Jesse McFadden were PRESS callers yesterday. Mrs. Dickinson ■ changing the address on her paper to Renovo, Pa.,where she is now located. Dr. and Mrs. E. O. Bardwell pleas antly entertained a few friends at dinner last Sunday, in honor of Mrs. F. A. Hill and daughters, who left on Monday for their new home in Wash ington state. C. A. Van Lew and family will leave in about two weeks for lowa, where they will reside permanently. Mr. Van Lew is one of our prominent con tractors and builders and we regret to see him, as well as his family go. Mrs. F. A. Hill and daughters depart ed on Monday for their new home at East Sound, Washington, where Mr. Hill is employed with a lumber firm. Their many Emporium friends regret their departure, yet hope their new home will te pleasant. i Geo. Hockley is taking in the sights I at Buffalo this week. Miss Mayme Clare of Cameron will return to Boßton, Mass., on Friday. Mrs. Joshua Bairjis spending a few days this week with St. Marys friends. Miss Lena Healy who has been visit ing at Chicago for some time has re turned home. Chief of Police Frank Monday has been a little under the weather and confined to his home since last Friday. The many friends of Mrs. J. Pitt Felt, at this place will be pained to hear that she is seriously ill at her home in Florida. Mrs. J. C. Lynch, and son Paul re turned to their home at Boston on Monday, after a several weeks' visit at her home at Cameron. Lyman Lewis returned last Tuesday from Cattaraugus, N. Y., where he at tended the Wesleyan Methodist Con ference as a delegate from this district. Some /"lore Newspaper Truths. Years of experience in newspaper work teaches a man that: The chap who tries hardest to work a newspaper for special favors is the one who never spends a cent with it, and is not a subscriber. That the man who kicks most about the inaccuracy of newspapers i 8 the one who does least to insist in getting the facts accurately when he has an oppor tunity to do so. That the man who kicks hardest about a certain paper hasn't seen a copy of it for six weeks. That the man who has it in for a paper has had the bitter truth told him by some unusually frank reporter and has a big sore spot. That the man who spends most money with the paper kicks the least. That if you expect a man to find a compliment about himself you must put it on the front page in bold face type. But if you putin a one line roast in nonpareil between two patent medicine ads, on the steenth page, he'll find it and come hunting the man what writ th' piece. That a man protected mericality in rascality never appreciates it, because the protection only encourages him in being the sort of reptile he is. That the paper which tries to please everybody by dying. That the man who spends least money for advertising expects more returns than the man who spends most. That those who patronize the paper systematically and persistently are most level headed and reliable citizens of the community. That shysters are sworn enemies of newspapers, thereby testifying elo quently to the respectability of the craft. —Commoner and Qlassworker. Fewer gallons; wears longer; Devoe. PASTURE.—I have good pasture on on Big Run for a large number ot cattle, at a reasonable price, apply to. MRS. A. R. NYHART, 4-4t. Beechwood, Pa. A large quantity of Royal New Yorker Seed Potatoes for sale, 75 cents per bushel, delivered. Also good eat ing potatoes at same price. Apply 6-3t. CHAS. C. WILEY. All Smokers smoke the 'W. H. Mayer" hand made cigar, the best five cent cigar on the market. Be sure you ask for it. 24-tf. An exchange very properly remarka, that the year 1903 must mark the ever lasting elimination of the ground hog from the list of trustworthy weather prophets. Six weeks have elapsed since he came out of his hole, saw his shadow reflected by the bright sunlight all day long and retired with the omn ious prediction that six weeks more of winter must be endured, and with an inadequate coal supply. The six weeks have gone by and only one of them have been a very wintry week; the rest have been mild, some of them balmy. The ground hog, otherwise the wood chuck, is a fraud unworthy of the elo quence which Daniel Webster, at the age of ten, expended in a successful ef fort to save him from the executioner. The public, says an exchange, can manage somehow to accommodate it self to the horseless carriages, creamless milk, moneyless pocketbooks, and care less hired girls, but when it wrestles with the question of how to get along with coalless coal bins, that is quite another matter. Sanger of Colds and Grip. The greatest danger for colds and grip is their resulting in pneumonia. If reasonable care be used, however, and Chamberlain's Cough Remedy taken, all danger will be avoided. Among the tens of thousands who have used this remedy for these diseases we have yet to learn of a siogle case having resulted in pneu monia, which shows conclusively that it is a certain preventive of that dangerous disease. It will cure a cold or an attack of the grip in less time than any other treatment. It is pleasant and safe to take. For sale by L. Taggart. Turkeys are innocent birds; almost any silly woman can stuff' them. Office Safe for Sale. ; A good-as-new safe, suitab'e for or j dinary business, for sale at a bargain I Apply at PRESS office. 5-tf. CAMERON COUNTY PRESS, THURSDAY, APRIL 9, 1903. Emmanuel Church. The service this evening, (Thurs day) will lie in the church and will lie for the members of the Parish generally. Services Good Friday, 10 a. m., and 7:30 p. in., choir at evening services. Service on Saturday at 10 a. m. Easter Day: 7:30 a. m., Ploly Communion. 11:00 a. m., Morning Prayer and Holy Corn in union and sermon. Field's TeDeum , Lohr's Creed, etc., and Stainer's an them. "They Have Taken Away My Lord," will be sung. The offerings will be for Diocesan Missions. 7:30 p. ni., Evening Prayer and sermon. The Sunday School Easter ser vice will be held in the afternoon at 4:00 o'clock. The Mite-Boxes will l>e received at this service. Baptismal services in new church at 3:30 p. m. Left iiljed People. Tho man who spends half his time trying to classify people said he never saw so many left eyed passengers In one car. "What do you mean by left eyed pas sengers?" asked his companion. "People who use their left eye more than their right," was the reply. "The species Is not common, and of course none but a student In ocular science would be able to detect otThand the few whom we do meet. A left handed per son advertises his peculiarity at once; not so the left eyed man. As a rule It takes an oculist to determine which eye has been used most, but there are cer tain peculiarities of the pupil and lid that may be taken as pretty sure signs by the trained observer. "Left eyed people are made, not born. Most of us have been blessed by nature with eyes of equal visual power, but ' the attitude we strike when reading or writing can»>s us to exercise one eye more than the other, and the first thing we know we are right or left eyed. This Is a one sidedness that should always be taken Into eonsideration when buy ing glasses."—New York Times. A Collector'* Prayer. So deeply passionate Is Mr. Hodg kin's love for the rare and the curious that one thinks of the Thomas Ilearne mentioned by him, who In all simplic ity of heart thanked God for his suc cess In collecting. "O most gracious and merciful Lord God," writes this devoutest of old bucks, "wonderful in thy providence, 1 return humble thanks to thee for the care thou hast always taken of me. I continually meet with most signal in stances of this thy providence, and one act of yesterday, when I unexpectedly met with three old manuscripts, for which in a particular manner I return my thanks, beseeching thee to continue the same protection to me a poor, help less sinner, and that for Jesus Christ his sake." The prayer is extant and may bo read at the Bodleian, where Ilearne was assistant librarian. London Chronicle. Bnliat'a Pu»word«. It was not easy to make one's way into Balzac's house at Chaillot, Rue des Batailles, for It was guarded like the garden of the Hesperldes. Two or three passwords were necessary, which were changed frequently for fear they should become known. I remember a few. To the porter we said, "The plum season has come," 011 which he allowed us to cross the threshold. To the serv ant who rushed to the staircase when the bell rang It was necessary to mur mur, "I bring some brußsels lace," and If you assured him that "Mme. Ber trand was quite well" you were admit ted forthwith. This nonsense amused Balzac immensely, and it was perhaps necessary to keep out bores and other visitors still more disagreeable.—Miss Wormley's "Memoir of Balzac." Makes a Clean Sweep. There's nothing like doing a thing thoroughly. Of all the Salves you ever heard of. Bucklen's Arnica calve is the best. It sweeps away and cures Burns, Sores, Bruises, Cuts, Boils, Ulcers, Skin Eruptions and Piles. It's only 25c, and guaranteee by L. Taggart, druggist. S The Plate to Buy Cheap $ £ J. F.PARSONS' I I 1 .1 I I o Sporting Goods at O I | I I—— * | ffl . P | HARRY S. LLOYD'S | Letter to F. D. Leet. Emporium, Pa. Dear Sir: Your business is when a house burns down, to give the owner some money to build a new one. It is a good business. Queer that the world got on so long without it. We paint the one that burnt down and the new one too. What is better we paint the houces that don't burn down. You insure the houses that burn; we insure the houses thatdon't. You have the ashes and smoke; all the houses are ours. We paint Lead and Zinc; Devoe. We sell the paint to painters; we don't paint. Lead and oil Is the old fashioned point. Devoe is zinc ground in with the lead and linseed oil; the best paint in the world; and the cheapest, because it takes fewer gallons than mixed paints and it wears twice as long as lead and oil. Nobody wants poor paint; there's lots of it, through, in the world. A. M. Griffon, PlainfleldN. J., writes: Mr. Aaron nigging, of Plainfield always used IS gallons of mixed paints for his house. Last SDring he bought 15 gallons of Devoe and had 4 gallons left. Yours truly, F. W. DEVOE, & Co., New York. P. S. Murray & Coppersmith sell our paint. Any Church. Or parsonage or institution supported by voluntary contribution will be given a liberal quanity of the Longman & Martinez Pure Paints whenever they paint. NOTE- Have done so for twenty seven years. Sales: tens of millions of gallons; painted nearly two million | houses under guarantee to repaint if not satisfactory. The paint wears for periods up to eighteen years. Linseed Oil must be added to the paint (done in two minutes). Actual cost then about $1.26 a gallon. Samples free. Sold by our Agente. Harry S. Lloyd. Eggs for Sale. Full blooded Wyandotte and Plym outh Rock eggs for hatching—sl.so for 13. J. T. HEALY, Emporium, Pa. 1-tf. DAY'S THE SATISFACTORY STORE. Good Things for Easter ! k \ 4p®4 tr^ "DOLD QUALITY." Boneless Bacon, lb 15c. Hams, small, lb. 15c. California Hams, lb. 12c. Rolled Avena, lb. 4c. "Ja-ma-ka" Coffee, lb. 20c. A good 25c coffee. OC Lb.Bag Sugar CI AH Aw Best Granulated. These special prices for Friday and Saturday should appeal to every shrewd provider for the family larder. Fresh Layed Cameron county Eggs. Ripe Tomatoes, Green Onions, Pine Apples, Cucuaibers, Strawberries, Radishes, Grapes, Celery, Bananas, Lettuce, Oranges, Apples. Try Crystal Domino Sugar, five pound package 50c. Phonee. J, H. DAY Due Notice Is Served. Due notice is hereby given on the public generally that DcYVitt's Witch Hazel Salve is the only naive on the market that is made from the pure un adulterated witch hazel. DeWitt's Witch Hazel Salve has cured thousands of cases ol piles that would not yield to any other treatment, and this fact has brought out many worthless counterfeits. Those per sons who get the genuine DeWitta Witch Hazel Salve are never disappointed, be cause it cures. 11. C. Dodson. Only the sympathetic are entitled to sympathy. For liver troubles and constipation There's nothing better in creation Than Little Early Ilisejs, the famons little pills They always effect a cure and save doctor bills. Little Early Risers are different from all other pills. They do not weaken the system, but act as a tonic to the tissues by arousing the secretions and restosing the liver to the full performance of its functions naturally. R. C. Dodson. A man's bull-headedness is his worst enemy. Oood for Children. The pleasant to take and harmless One Minute Cough Cure gives immediate re lief in all cases of Cough, Croup and LaGrippi because it docs not pass im mediately into the stomach, but takes ef fect right at the seat of the trouble. It draws out the inflammation, heals and sooths and cures permanently by enabling the lungs to contribute pure life —giving and life—sustaining oxygen to the blood and tissues. 11. C. Dodson. The bunion's progress is painfully in teresting to the pilgrim. The One Package Dye. In red printed wrappers, colors cot ton, wool or silk in sacae bath. Sample 10c, any color. New Peerless, Elmtra, N. Y. _ 50 26t. It's easier to make good resolutions than to break bad habits. c THS"2SPS^ HI | "IT i. 1 I Ift j g| ! Notice! I n) rpHIS should interest all [n In 1 /SjV,.,t y yjl men who wear up to date fjj K >F\\ R .; ■\ TAILOR MADE CLOTHES, JY I Fobert, the Tailor | I ll| ° " *|S3BSSP IS now ready with an In i i\| t vsmif up to date line of nJ ft lX> %:> SUITINGSandTROUS- f{] P ERS fresh from New |n ffl vf i j Remember men, the j{] n] t/ ■" r ~~ I best is the cheapest in In In | jjj j " < " et Y ° ur Money s Worth '" § [jj : ft VI i nl-. lamin a position to }{] m Vi .>C \ I j /MM you your money's uj LH || I' V*xJ/ iJ Hi first-class workmen and H] /J ; I\• \ V "Aim I handle only first-class [n ' S\ '• •'•> 112 * ■ goods, and our prices [U [}j ■ \ r - y&£ -1 ■ are within reach of all. [{] W ® ive me a tr ' a^ I . ® J. L. FOBERT, | Emporium, Pa_ uj _^sasasasHbasHsHs^sasasHSHsasHSHsasHsasHs^3S2SHsd^_ ' WHEN IN DOUBT. TRY They b*Tc«tood <he'«tof yean. imSSHi&fa. ATnnklA - - - . and h«v« cured thousands of \ I KIINU mT\ g /jk 00/ ycases of Nervous Diseases, such ■ I OinUnO mF* _ ftk fjAas Debility. Piziiness.SleepleM f nniltl T | |l^T^^^gj^Wy^ssand^icoce.e.AUophy.^. fillll 111 ■ J- _ the circulation, make digestion j£\ perfect, and impart a healthy pwv vigor to the whole beiog. All drains and losses are checked permanently. Unless patients are properly cured, their condition often worries them into Insanity, Consumption or Death. yjs Jh Miilr ri sealed. Price $i per box; 6 boxes, with iron-clad legal guarantee to cure or refund th* Jr 112 money, $5.00. Send for free book. Address* PEAL MEDICINE CO., Clovelaftd, 0. For sale by R. C. Dodson. Druggist. Emporium, Pa. 1 _ ~ G.SCHMIDT'S, FOR FRESH BREAD || popular P '™^. ~ CONFECTIONERY Daily Delivers AH orders given prompt and J skillful attention. ! GROCERIES I J I is si nj in J2 Having just putin a Dj jjj nice line of Groceries jjj In with our meats, we ni OJ are now ready to fill nj [}{ your orders at the |{] ! p very lowest prices. tfj I ry Everything fresh j j{] and strictly hi g h [n I Jjj grade. A fine line of cookies from 10c rU [H lb to 22c lb. These !{] jjj are the best cookies jy n] made. u] | _ I S GOODS DELIVERED PROMPTLY. B Geo. H. Gross.| [■sggsHsgsHsasasasHsagggsaifl madam Dean's I A safe, certain relisf for Suppressed 8 Menstruation. Never known to fail. Safe! I Sure! Speedy! Satisfaction Guaranteed I or money Refunded. Sent prepaid for ■ SI.OO per box. Will send them on trial, to I be paid for whan relieved. Samples Free. I UNITED MCDIOLCO.. Box T4. L«KC«TIII, P». J Sold inKmporium by L. Taggart and B. C Dodson. 1 nvr vm A core gnfcraßleed If you use ■ 1 PILES BUPPOSHOIUI tjl Mait. Thompson, Supt. H tJ Graded Schools, StatesvlUe, X. C., writes : " I can saj H H they do all you claim fur them." Dr. 8. M. Devore, ■ §■ Raven Rock. W. Va., writes : " They prire universal satis- ■ ■ faction." I>r. H. I). McGill, Clarksburg, Tenn., writes: H H *' In a practice of 23 years, I have fouud no remedy to H ■ equal yours." Paici, 50 ('sura. Samples Free. Sold H Jby Drugglm- h»IITIN BUOY, UNCMTH, M. J Sold in Emporium by L. Taggart and R. O. Dodson. Call for free sample.
Significant historical Pennsylvania newspapers