2 CAMERON COUNTY PRESS. H. H. MULLIN, Editor. Published Every Thursday. TERMS OF SUBSCRIPTION. fer °® u p»ld In advance * ADVERTISING RATES: Advertisements are published at the rate of •oe dollar per square for one Insertion ami fifty •ents per square for each subsequent Insertion. Rates by the year, or for six or three months, »re low and uniform, and will be furnished on application. Legal and Official Advertising per square, three times or less, »2: each subsequent inser tion Ml rents per square. Local notices 10 cents per line for one lnser acrtlon: ft cents per line for each subsequent consecutive Insertion. Obituary notices oyer five lines. 10 cents per line. Simple announcements of births, mar riasrrs and deaths will be inserted free. Business cards, five lines or less. ?f> per ye»r. over live lines, at the regular rates of adver tising No local Inserted for less than 75 cents per Mtie- JOB PRINTING. The Job department of the Press is complete ■nd affords facilities for dointf tho best class of srork. P a unci; i.a u atteniion paiuto Lau Printing. No paper will bo discontinued until arrear- Kts arc paid, except »t the option of tho pub he r. Papers sent out ol the county must be paid for in advance. w 1 ,i ■ The Belfast citj corporation lias de cided to place shelters for consump tives in one of the public parks. Pro test meetings are being held. Gen. C. A. Whittier, formerly In charge of the United States customs I at Manila, returned to this country by 1 way of Siberia. It took him two weeks j to cross the latter country on the new j railroad. Of the $ KMC.274 worth of bananas which came into New York city with- j in the last year 2,862,000 bunches were ! from the British West Indies. 1,152,000 j bunches from Costa -Rica, 877,000 from Colombia and 355 from Cuba. They pay no duty. The cotton crop of Alabama. Arkan sas and South Carolina is about 1,000,- 000 bales, worth SSO each. Georgia and Mississippi produce 1,400,000 bale 3, i and Texas 2,400,000. More than half the cotton is now produced west of tho ' Mississippi river. The area planted to rice in Japan in | 1901 is given officially at 0,978,384 I acres, the area in barley and wheat | together at 4,452,242 acres. The aver- I age. yield of rice- per acre was 30.3 j bushels, of barley 22.3 bushels, and of j wheat 18.4 bushels. Lord Salisbury will be remembered for three things—for having defeated I home rule, for having kept the peace j between France and Britain at the | time of Fashoda, and for having pre- j vented the intervention of Europe in j the South African war. Notwithstanding the strenuous effort j to induce tho purchase of Canadian i goods to the exclusion of the manufac- J tured products of the United States, ! and despite British preferential tariff J duties, the United States is constantly increasing its exports to the Dominion. A curious memorial of the Boer war is recorded from Surrey. At ! Burstaw, in that county, a drinking 1 trough and fountain have been erected by a local personage in memory of ; 4,000 horses killed and wounded during the South African war from 1899 to 1902, "in a cause of which they knew nothing." - - The shoemakers in Madrid recently i combined to encourage dancing, with j the object of wearing out as much shoe leather as possible. They hired j several dancing halls and charged 6d j admission. Each admission ticket bears a coupon, 20 of which entitles j the owner to a new pair of shoes free j of charge at the union store. A peculiar business transaction was | recorded at Lebanon, Pa., when Grocer J John Light transferred to Baker Win. A. Garrett a 15-acre farm in Berks county for a consideration of 7,000 loaves of bread. The bread is to be de livered in quantities such as may be weeded to supply the daily demand of patrons at Grocer Light's store. The naval construction program of the French admiralty for 1904 com prises 70 vessels. Of this huge total 59 are to be torpedo boats, which are to be constructed by private shipbuild ing firms. Sixteen new submarines are to be built, one armored cruised of 13,644 tons and 23 knots speed, and two torpedo boat destroyers, with a speed of 30 knots. Tho United Kingdom now consumes 55,000,000 worth of bananas a year. Three-fourths of the supply comes from the Canary Islands and the bal ance from the West Indies, the imports from tho latter source being tho growth of the past three years. In 1902 the total English imports amount ed in value to $5,159,770, against $4,. 261,475 in 1901 and $2,671,594 in 1900. Colorado, Wyoming and Utah havo many women officeholders, three re cent elections giving the office of city treasurer to women, two receiving the city clerkship and one town elected a woman clerk and recorder. Both Idaho and Colorado have women state superintendents of public instruction, the one in the latter state is now serv ing her third term. The national su perintendent of Indian schools is a Wyoming woman. A New York magistrate has suggest ed a fund for prisoners' wives. The unfortunate women and children who are deprived of support by the impris onment of the husband and father fre quently suffer much more than does the man upon whom the punisfffnent is inflicted. Justice and the welfare of the community demand a penalty from the wrongdoer, and the wives and children who incidentally suffer aro not considered in the matter at alk HIS GREATEST FIGHT. Goriunn'n l.fforf to Capture tli«* ucralic Nomination 1M II Ilnnl One. Gorman is making the fight of his life in Maryland. His issues are "Down with the nigger" and "up with the trusts." Gorman stood in with the trusts when he made the Gorman-Wilson tar iff, and he has been standing for the trusts ever g-inec. He wishes to cut out Cleveland as a friend of the trusts and he means to do it, and he knows that by standing for "a white man's govern ment" he will have the solid south, says the Boston Journal. No doubt among the political demo crats Gorman stands much higher than Cleveland. Gorman's recent bitter at tack upon President Roosevelt, on ac count of the colored race, is intended to make the south solid for Gorman. Gor man hates Cleveland and is bound to have the trust builders with him. Cleveland a few months ago was re garded as the choice of the speculative elements in Wall street. Gorman notes that Cleveland did not say anything against. Roosevelt's handling of the coal strike and the trust question. Gorman made a bid for the Wall street support. Gorman remarked that the president was "imprudent in interfering with mat ters which did not properly belong to his office and that, therefore, he had un settled business." He was standing in with Baer and standing against refer- S ence. The ice is pretty thin along there. | This attack of Gorman on Roosevelt j is received with amusement in Wash ington; for it discloses the hypocrisy of i the anti-trust professions of the demo- s crats. When Roosevelt ordered that the j law which President Cleveland did not enforce must be enforced to regulate | trusts to find the leading democratic i candidate for the presidency declaring ! that "Roosevelt is imprudent and is un- j settling business" —imprudent because he enforces a law enacted for that pur pose! The negro-phobia and pro-trust platform of the democracy, accordingly, is the high bid which Gorman makes for the leadership of the democratic party j next ytar. And four years ago the j democrats claimed to be the only simon- | pure anti-trust party! Including Maryland, the old southern states run by race hatred will have 282 votes in the next democratic national convention. To this vote may be added the vote of Missouri, making 318 in all. In the north the trust proposition will be made prominent, but the nullification of the fifteenth amendment is for south ern votes. Gorman hopes, by opposing the administration's trust regulation policy, to get the democratic delegates from the New England states, from New York, Pennsylvania, New Jersey and Delaware. Thus Gorman would have I more than a majority of the votes of the | convention, and that would be a good j start for the necessary two-thirds. But democratic papers in the north warn Gorman that he is playing with fire— that the north will resent a race war. But a factor to be reckoned with is Tom Johnsonism and Bryanism. While Gorman has drawn up a plan which seems to him to read well, he must reckon with those Bryanized forces in the democratic party which in 1900 and in 1890 dominated the party. It is not to be supposed that the forces which were in majority in two national republican battles, will be silent or unimportant in 1904. The republicans do not disguise their satisfaction with Gormanism as an issue. ! In IS9O Gormanism was an issue from j the tariff point of view and the repub- j licans elected McKinley with a rush. In , 1904 if Gormanism is brought forward j again, not only in the matter of tariff, j but in the matters of wind water in 1 trusts and necrophobia, the republicans | will unhesitatingly indorse the part < which the president took in enforcing i the law regulating the great corpora- | tions. The republicans will stand solid- ' ly for the protection of capital against promoters and of labor against exploit- • ers. What will become of the Bryanite contingent if such men as Gorman are j nominated? Unquestionably there will be a socialist ticket which will largely divide the democratic vote. COMMENTS OF THE PRESS. tcT'lt seldom happens that an elec- i tion in any state results In so expansive a victory as that which the republicans in Ohio have just achieved. It is a triple victory—a triumph for the repub- ! lican party, for genuine democracy and for the country. It is the knell of Bry- ! anism, and in that fact it bodes nothing ( but good to the democratic party.— i Washington Post. fact that Senator Hanna or ! any other prominent republican j achieves a great personal triumph in his \ own state, due in part to the popularity j of the administration, is no reason why i nearly a score of states already pledged j to the support of President Roosevelt | in 1904 should go back on him. Senator j Hanna has done himself credit by de clining to give it any encouragement. By so doing he has enhanced the al ready high regard in which he is held by republicans generally, but for the pres ent, at least, they will continue to re gard President Roosevelt as the logical candidate in 1904. —Indianapolis Jejur nal. CSilver is back to 59%, and the gov ernment has resumed its purchases. Somebody must have explained to the silver men that they can really make more money by not trying to make it; in too big bunches. —Indianapolis News ( (Ind.) tCTlie Ohio democrats in the last previous election had ignored Bryan and his fads. They got soundly whipped. Bryan and his friends maintained that it was because of the despite done to his Lrand of politics. This campaign was planned to show the world that Bryan ism and Johnsonism were yet whining doctrines.—Boston Herald. I CAMERON COUNTY PRESS, THURSDAY, DECEMBER 3 1903. NOT POLITICAL. The I'ntininn Mnttrr Uopn Not F.ntci Into t k«* l*re*i<l«M«tln I < n in pa Ik n In Thin Country. Recognition of the de facto mentJ of the republic of Panama does not constitute a basis for a political issue in the United States. Circum stances have put the United States, as the agent of peace and protection on the isthmus, in such a position that It is bound to forestall any injury to American citizens, and to recognize a provisional administration. It has not only kept within its rights so far, but has done no more than its duty, says the St. I.ouis Republic (elem.). The revolt against the Colombian government will probably signify the success of the canal project, whether Panama should remain independent or whether it should again unite with Co lombia. If Panama should continue as a free republic there should be no dif ficulty in arranging a canal treaty. If an unforeseen cause should once more combine Panama and Colombia, har mony would not prevail unless Colom bia would acquiesce in the plans for an interoceanic shipway. Colombia incited the revolutiein by dallying with the isthmian canal treaty. Panama considered the canal necessary for its welfare, and the attitude of the central government forced the trouble. The opinion was generally held that j Colombia did not accede to the plans because some of its public officers had ' excessive itchiness of palm. The Unit ed States government was not operat | ing as a "legislative agent" or a finan ; cial-salve physician and it elid not re | alize the Colombian dreams. Colombia j then disregarded the interests ofPana j ma. and Panama revolted. The United States has large rights I and great authority, as well as grave (responsibility, in isthmian affairs. It j conformed to recognize duty in taking steps for the maintenance of peace and order and the protection of life and property. While the canal affair, in i which the United States is probablj i the most interested party, was the cause of the revolt, and while it is a matter iof international importance, it is, theoretically, only an incident. Should the revolution be beneficial to the Unit ed States, as it will, there will be still no reason for blaming this government unless it proceeds to take offensive steps beyond its recognized policy. Any effort to make a political issue oi the Panama matter would have to be founded on not only the proceedings connected with the revolution, but also on the merits and benefits of the pro posed canal. There is nei dissent from the view that a canal would be good for the southern, middle and western I states, and that it would do no injurj jto the eastern and northern states. The canal project seems to have the favor oj nearly all of the states and of most foreign governments. How the affaii could be made a political issue by either party is hard to perceive. The only ground could be some unreasonable ex treme of interference not yet developed by our state department. THE FAULT-FINDERS. Republican*! I>o the \\ (irk unci th* Democrat m Itnlse All the Objection*. The democratic leaders in the houst have been full of sympathy for the woei iof Cuba. They have constantly foune ! fault with the republican majority foi I not making greater speed toward estab j lishing those trade relations with Cubs [so evidently demanded by her interests i and our own, says the Chicago Intel I Ocean. Yet when the bill to do these verj ' : things came tip in the house the demo : crats sought to kill it with an amend j meat to remove the differential duty or refined sugar. The direct effect of sue! i amendment would be to transfer a largt | part of the sugar-refining industry frem i the United States to Europe. Indirectlj i it would destroy the sugar growing In ! dustry of democratic Louisiana, Missis j sippi and Texas by depriving it of t near-by market of refineries. Of course that was not what the dem ocrats really wanted to do. Had tin republicans accepted their proposa. they would have run crying to the sen ; ate to save a leading industry of thre? democratic states from the destructive folly of their own democratic repre sentatives. What they really wanted tc ; do was merely to"put the republicans in a hole" by killing the Cuban treaty i so they could denounce the republicar j administration for failing to carry out | a great national policy. [ "We do the work and you find th» j fault," was the phrase in which Speakei j Cannon at the close of the fifty-seventh | congress described the attitude of th( j two great parties toward questions ol I national interest and honor. Tile accu j racy of the description was again proved i by the course of the house democrats j And yet there are thousands of well meaning democrats who cannot under stand why the American people refuse to trust their party with the great busi ness of government. E7Mr. Bryan should have faith in the country's prosperity when he finds him self able to give up $50,000 without a murmur.—Washington fttar. in7"Whot does Mr. Bryan mean by going abroad on a steamer named the Majestic? Has he become an imperial ist? —N. Y. World (Dem.) j tty'The democratic party has wiser ( and stronger men than Bryan and John | son, and its old principles were at. least better than those it borrowed in 1890. Its defeat in 1904 seems certain in any case, but it need not add all the follies of erankdom to its burdens of error and incompetency. Nor shall it inevitably happen that two new absurdities must sprout at the spot where Tom Johnson was lopped off.—St. Louis Globe-Demo t crat. THAT MAGAZINE ARTICLE. Major If uncle TestllleN that It wm Written at the llrqumtof lien. Wood —lt Atlarketl Brooke. Washington, Nov. 2S.—The senate committee on military affairs yester day heard Maj. James H. Kuncie, of Havana, probably the most important witness that will lie offered by the opponents of Gen. Leonard Wood in their attempt to prevent bis con firmation to be major general. Maj. Runcie was on tbe stand several times during the titty, telling the committee of a dinner at Santiago, Cuba, attended by himself, lien. Woo*l and Kay Stannard Baker, a newspaper man, at which it is al leged, was planned the magazine ar ticle attacking Maj. Gen. Brooke that has figured conspicuously in the Wood ease. Kuncie was stopped more than once during the course of his testimony and told to give nothing but facts e>f which be had personal knowledge. This did not exclude his story of the dinner incident whiitli resulted in the issue of subpoenas for three other witnesses, among whom is Gen. Brooke. In bis testimony Kuncie explained that he had acted as the confidential adviser of Gen. Wood for nearly two years and that they lived together at Santiago, it was while they were living in the same house that .Mr. Baker went to Santiago in search of material for a magazine article. A meeting was arranged between the three men and a dinner followed, testifieel Maj. Kuncie, at which was discussed the plan to have published an article which would exploit the success of (ien. Wood in dealing with affairs at Santiago and draw a com parison with the situation at Havana unfavorable to the administration of Gen. Brooke. Maj. Kuncie declared that Gen. Wood asked him to write the article and that he had done so. The ar ticle was given to Baker and pub lished in February, 1900, over the name of Maj. Kuncie. lie asserted that Gen. Wood knew what the ar ticle contained and that they had corresponded about it as the result of the furore created by its publica tion. He offered to produce copies of letters which be had written to Gen. Wood concerning bis own de fense. It was not until after (ien. Wood succeeded (ien. Brooke that the article was published. The effect was a severance of the relations be tween the witness and Gen. Wood. GROVER'S STATEMENT. Mr. Cleveland Declare* that lie U Not a Candidate Tor the {'residential Nomination. New York, Xov. 2s. —tirover Cleve land lias sent the following letter to the editor of the Brooklyn Daily Kagle: "■Princeton, November 2.5, 1903. "My Dear McKelway: 1 have want ed for ii long time to say something which 1 think should be said to you before others. "You can never know how grate ful 1 am for tlie manifestation of kindly feeling toward me on the part of my countrymen, which your initia tive has brought out. Your advo cacy in the Eagle of my nomination for the presidency came to me as a great surprise; and it lias been sec onded in such manner by democratic sentiment that conflicting thoughts of gratitude and duty have caused me to hesitate as to the time and manner of a declaration on my part concerning the subject—if such a declaration should seem necessary or proper. "In the midst oi it all and in full view of every consideration present ed, I have not for a moment been able nor am 1 now able, to open my mind to the thought that in any cir cumstances or upon any considera tion I should ever a gam become llie nominee of my party for the presi dency. "My determination to do so is un alterable and conclusive. "This you, at least, ought to know from me; and I should be glad if tho Kagle were made the medium of its conveyance to the public. Very sin cerely yours, "GROVEJI CLEVELAND." REVIEW OF TRADE. Klgns of Improvement are Noted In Several Krunelient of Ku*iiie*». New York, Nov. 2S.—~ K. G. Dun & Co.'s Weekly Keview of Trade says; Seasonable temperature and holi day purchases stimulated retail trade, making results more satisfac tory during the past week than at any recent date. Improvement was most conspicuous in heavy wearing apparel and kindred lines that have remained dull because of the mild weather. Another encouraging fea ture was the resumption of work at many mills, although there is still much idle machinery, especially in the textile and iron industries. In view of the numerous wage re ductions there is noteworthy har mony between employers and work ers, indicating that labor leatlers ap preciate the necessity of sharing in the readjustment. Grain shipments increased with the approaching close of navigation on the lakes, and freight tratlic was subjected to the greatest pressure of the season. Railway earnings for three weeks ol November averaged 5.2 per cent, larger than last year. It is at last possible to perceive an improvement in the demand for pig irou, due to the exhaustion of sup plies by consumers?, the extensive re duction in output and absence of fur ther price concessions. Business is by no means brisk, nor is there any expectation of wholesome activity during the remaining weeks of this year, yet there is evidence ejf return ing confidence. Jurtire Cleveland'* Oeclslon. New Haven, Conn., Nov. 2S. —Th« formal decree of the probate cemrt in relation to the Philo S. Bennett will, of which William J. Bryan is an executor, was announced Friday by Probate Judge Cleveland. After re citing the facts in the case Judge Cleveland decrees that neither the sealed letter by which it appeared that Mr. Bennett expressed a desire to give $50,000 to Mr. Bryan and fam ily and the typewritten document in the possession of Mr. Bryan, nor the envelope containing the letter should be admitted to probate as part of the will. Otherwise the will was allowed and ordered to be recorded. | Pennsylvania RAILROAD. PHILADELPHIA AND ERIE RAILROAD DIVISION. ID effect May 24,1903. TRUNS LEAVE EMPORIUM EASTWARD 816 A. M.—Weak <l*v« for Sunbury, Wilkesbarre, Scranton, Ha etoa Pot'.sville, Harrisburg end intermediate ta ions. arriving at i'hiladelp iia 6.23 P. M., New t ork!t.3o P. M., Baltimore 6.U0 P. M. t Washiq,'tou 7.15 P. M. Pullman Parlor car fro ta *Villiamsport to Philadelphia an Kane to Philadelphia und Willia nsport to Balll* more and Washington. ia its p. M. (Emporium Junction) dal'y for San bury, Harris! ur< and princ,p.il intermediate stations, arrhin; at Philadelphia, 7:32 p.m.; New York, 10:23 o. in.; Ilaltuuore, 7:30 p. in.; Washington, 8:35, v.m. Vestibulcd Parlor cars aud passenger c< ac'us, Buffalo to Phils* delphm and Wushiii ton 820 P. M.—daily ior Har-isburg an-* ; intermediate stbtiois, arriving at fniladel | phia, 4.26 A. M. New York 7.13 A. M. Baltimore. 2:?0 A.M. Washingt >n, 3:30 A.M. Pullman9le ping c irsfrom Harrieburgt jPhit adelphia and New York. Philadelphia pas senderscan rtuaiM. u sleeper undisturbe ! us ; ti17:30 A. M. ; '0 25 P. M —Dailj for Sunbury, Harris burg and inter nediate stations arrivin? at Philadelphia 7.22 A. M., New York 9.33 A. M.. weekdays, (10.3) A. M. S inclay;) Haltimore 7.15 A. M., Washington 8.30 A.M. PullmansUep | ingcarsfrom Erie, Buff .lo and Wiiiiamspo.tto j Philadelphia and Bull'ala, Williamspirt to I Washington. Passenger cars from Erie to Philadelphia and Wiliiamsport to Haltimore. 12:01 A. M. (Emporium Junction),daily for Sun bury, Harrisburg and princ pal | stations, arriving at Philadelphia, 7:22 a. m j New York, 9:33 a. m., week days; (10:33 Sun days); Baltimore, 7:15 a. m.; Washington. 8:30 a.m. Vestibuled Buffet Sleeping Cars and : Passenger toiches, Buffalo to Philadelphia | and Washington. WESTWARD. 6:10 A. M. -Emporium Junction— daily for Erie, Ridgway, and week days for Du- Bois, Clermont aud intermediate stations. 10 30 A. M.— Daily for Erie and week dayl for I>u Hois andi ntermediate stations. 823 P. M. —Week days tor Kane and intermediate stations. RIDOWAY AND CLEARFIELD R. R. CON NECTIONS. ! (Weekdays.) i HOUTMWABD. Stations. NORTHWABI ». M. A. M. A. M.j IP. M. P. M. P. M. j J 00 4 00J Renovo !50011 4t .... | 9 50 4 3S|.. .Driftwood j 4 00 11 Of ! 10 25j 5 lOiEmporium June 3 23 10 35 I 11l 13: 5 Ml-...5t. Marys | 2 4l| » 50 | 825 11 o">[ 6 001 Kane 112 25 305 825 8 4! 11 23 6 22}.. ..Wilcox 12 05 2 45 8 04 865 11 3* 6 3<ij .Johnsonburg., 9 55j 233 7 ■!» 4 10 12 1C 7 OOJ... Ridgway 9 30 t 15 7 80 *4 20 12*20 7 10*..Mill Haven... 920204 720 45012 30 7 21'.. Croyland.... 910 1 54 709 43412 33 7 25'..Shorts Mills.. 906 1 51 705 4i>7 12 36 7 2H1.. .Blue Rock... 902 147 701 4 41 12 40 7 311 Carrier 8 57 1 43, 6 57 4 .'1 12 .'.O 7 41?. Brock way ville. 849 1 33 647 4 412 54 7 47j...1.anes Mills.. 8 44; 128 643 ; 7 Slj.McMinns Sm't. 8 10 ! 638 ! 50i 103 7 Sll.Harveys Hun.. 8 35j 119 635 51 1 110 8 Ojl..Falls Creek... 830 115 630 626 125 , 8 13|.... DuHois 820 1 05| 6XO 512 I 15 8 05'..Falls Creek... 653 1 15 63C 627 132 818 . Reynoldsville.. 63912 52 6 U ! 600 t S9J 845 .. Brookville... 60512 2 1 53i I 045 2 .381 933 New Bethlehem 11 47 45C i 7 2i 320 10 10 ...Red Bank 11 10 4 OS 945 5 30 12 3» Pittsburg 8 00 1 36 j P. V. P. M. P. M.L A. M. iA. M. jP. M, lit' FFA'.O & ALLEGHENY VALLEY ; DI\ISI N. j Ltav Emporium Junction for Pott Allegany, 0 ean, Arcade, East Aurora and Buffalo. ' Trai i No. 107, daily, 4:05 A. M. Tra n No. lt">. dailv, 4:15 P. M. Trtlns leavj Emporium for Keating, Porl Allegany, Coudersport, Smethport, Eldred, Bradford,Oleanand Buffalo,connecting at Buf i falo for points East and West. 1 Train No. 1 U.week clays 8:30 A. M. Trail No. 103, week days 1:40 P. M. Tiaii No. 103 will connect at Olean with Chautiuqua Division for Allegany, Bradford, Halamanca Warren, Oil City and Pittsburg. | J? ow GRADE DIVISION. EASTBOUND. . . -j - STATIONS. 109 113 101 105 107. 001 A. M. A. M. A. M. P SI P. M A. M. Pittsburg,.. Lv. I +6 15 +9 00 fl3o »505 J 9 00 Red Bank ] 9 28 11 10 1 05 7 55 11 10 Lawsonham,..! 9 40 <1122 4 18 8 07 11 23 New Bethie'm. 10 13 it 47 4 50 8 37 11 58 Brookville, ..... 16 05 11 00 12 24 5 39 9 22 12 41 Revnoldsville,. I 639 11 32 12 52 a 159 50 1 14 Fails Creek ...| 653 11 48 1138 30 1005 129 Dußnis, | 700 fll 55 125 640 1010 J1 85 Babula 7 1 2 1 37 8 52 |* Pennfield | 7 30 1 55 7 10 5? Bennezetto,.... 8 01 2 29 7 44 o : Driftwood 18 40 f3 05 1820 ? via P. & E. Div ; Driftwood.. Lv. *9 50 +3 45 j Emporium, Ar. tlO 30 +4 10 I I A. M. A. M. P. M. P. M P. M p. M, WESTBOUND. j—; - STATIONS. 108 108 102 j 114 110 942 | | | Via P. AE.Div A. M. A.M. A. M. P. M. P. M P. M. Emporium, Lv ;+8 15 t3 20, Driftwood, Ar |fß 00 f4 00 .... Via L. Q. Div ji .... Driftwood, Lv t6 10 til 10 t5 50i Bennezette 6 45 11 45 6 26 1 Pennfield, ! 7 20 12 20 7 00 I Babula i; 12 39 7 18 I Dußois .. ; *6 10 8 00 12 55 t5 05 7 35 J4 10 ! Falls Creek I 6 17 8 112t 1 - I 15 512 7 42 4 17 Reynoldsville,.. 631 8 18j 129 527 758 430 | Brookville 7 05 8 45 1 59 6 00 t8 30 5 00 New Bethie'm. 751 933 238 645 545 Lan-sonham,..i 8 21 957 13 06 7 14 ... . 6 IS i Red Hank.Ar.. 8 35 10 10 3 20 7 25 6 30 Pittsburg, Ar... *ll 15 t1235 t5 30 19 45 30 I A. M. P. M. P. M R. M. P. M. P. M. Note—Train 107 on Sundays will make all stop j between Red Bank and Dnßois. | 'Daily. tDaily except Sunday. JSunday only ! SFlng Stop. j * For Time Tables and further information, ap 1 !y to Ticket Agent. W. W. ATTERBURY, GEO. W. BOYD, Ueneral Manager. Gen'l Passenger Agt. EAfITWARD. j - 10 IBj4 I 6 I STATIONS. P. M. P. M. A. M. A. M. Port Allegany,.. Lv. 3 15 I 7 05 1 11 38 Coleman *3 21 .... °° *ll 41 Burtville, *3 30 j 7 16 | 11 47 Roulette, I 3 40 7 25 | 11 55 Knowlton'B, *3 45 1 00 ,*ll 59 ! Mina ! 3 59 ! 7 35 12 05 ! Olmsted *4 05 *7 38 "12 09 Hammonds I °° | i *l2 13 „ . . 112 Ar. 420 A. M. 745 12 15 Coadersport. | hy g i 0; ft oo 100 I North Coudersport *0 15 i OO *1 05 Frlnk's 6 2V «6 10 »1 12 Colesburg, ..... 40 *6 17 120 Seven Bridges, # 6 45 *6 21; *1 24 Raymonds's, *7 00 *6 30j 1 38 Gold 705 636 141 Newfield 00 [ ! 148 Newfield Junction, 737 6 45 ! 150 Perkins, *7 40 *6 « •! 53 Carpenter's, 746 00 *1 57 Crowell's j 7 50 *6 53 *1 01 Ulysses, Ar 1 8 05 705 210 IA. M I I P. M. WSBTWARD. rm 112 a STATIONS. 11 IA. M P. M. A. M Ulysses, Lv. 7 20 1 '25 910 Crowell's, j*7 27 *2 32 * 9 19 Carpenter's, ! 03 *2 34 "9 22 I Perkins "7 32 -i 37 * 9 26 ' NewlisldlJunction 737 242 932 i Newfield, *7 41 240 3 •••*. I Gold 744 249 940 I Raymond's *7 49 2 54 * 947 i Seven Bridges »8 01 »3 03* lO 02 Colesburg *8 04 3 09 *lO 10 ..... Frink's, ?! *8 12 *3 17 *lO 20 North Coudersport, | OO *3 28 *lO 35 .... t Ar. 8 25 3 30 10 451 Coudersport, < I I P.M. I Lv. 823 600 120 Hammonds, j°° „°° 00 Olmsted, *8 33 *6 05 *1 31 Mina 837 610 137 Knowlton'a, 00 •« " Rc alette 847 62i 151 ..... Burtville.. 854 623 201 ..... Coleman, 00 *6 3ft ' .>•«. Pol t Allegany, 908 640 2 281 I (•) Flag stations. (°°) Trains do not stop 112) Telegraph ofilcea Troiu N oa. 3 and If aarry passenger!. Tains a and 10 do. Trail.s run on Eastern Standard Time. Connection*—At Ulysses with Fall Brook R'o for points north and south. At B. A S. Junw* lion with Ruffalo St Husquehanuaß. R. north fo» Wellsviile, south for Galeton and Ansonia. Al fort Allegany with W. N. Y.&P. B. K., north for Buffalo, Oleun, Bradford and Smethporty louth for Keating Summit, Austin, Emporium and Pinn'u It. R., points. 8. A. McCLURE Gen'lSupt. Coudersport, Pa. B'JFFALO & SUSQUEHANNA R. F Time Table taking Effect June 23, 1902. ButUio tftd 3utqu«fc»fuia ••The (jrand Scenic Route." READ DOWN. :A. MJF. M.'P. M.IA. M.! If K'lingSmt... 12 40 7 30; 9 10 i Austin 6 85; 1 05 8 00! 9 80 j Costello 0 44 111 I 1 Wharton 6 561 1 26 ! 3 10 Cross Fork Jet. 7 2 09 4 23 Corbett 8 06 2 36 | 5 15 Germania j i 2 471 j 5 15 I Lv. ! f)aiet ° n ' k'ii '2M::::: 535!!!!! Gaines Jet. 8 3fi 3 06 1 ...Westfleld... 9 13 3 43 1 .. Knoxville.... 926 3 56 | ) ....Osceola.... 936 4 06 I [ j .. ..Elkland .... 941 4 111 i Ir..Addison..., 10 13 4 43 ] A. hi. P. M.! ! I I ! i I--J . —READ UP. A. M. P. M.'P. M. P. M.} IP. M, 1 ir.K't'ngSmt... 8 45 7 10 12 25 ; Austin 8 00 6 43 11 58 8 I ....Costello j 6 34 ... 11 49 8 3ft | ...Wharton,...! j 6 24 8 04 11 39 8 24 '• Cross Fork J'ct, ! 8 40 7 28 10 58 7 40 ! Corbett ! . . ! 5 15! 6 44 10 34 TIS ! ...Germania,...! 1 5 071 6 31 10 26 7 OT dp. Galeton P.M.; 6 00 6 251 .< ar, •' 7 00 1 fcO 10 20 7 UCV | ... Gaines, ... 6 I ...Westfleld,... 6 11 12 li 8 16 6 11 i ...Knoxvllle... 5 55 11 55 8 00 5 66 ; ....Osceola 5 46 11 46 7 51 1 5 49 ; ....Elkland 5 41 11 41 7 40 5 4t Lv Addison 6 10 11 10' 7 16 J 5 10 P. M. P. M. A. M. A. M P. M. I 1 I i I I j Read down. Read up. P. M. A. M. P. M. A. M..P. M i 9 21 7 00 lv. Ansonia ..ar 9 40 8 20;„ 9 111 j.. Manhatten... 954 8 35 9 07 i.South Oaines,. 9 67 8 39 ..... P. M.I 859 637 ..Gaines June.. 959 842 ...... : ! 8 45 8 25 ar lv; k 56 I 8 30 1 05 lv / (,aleton j ar 10 10 4 45 ; 6 47 1 241 Walton 9 51 4 39 i I 7 13 150 Newlield Jet... 927 415 .... . j 7 30 200 West Bingham,. 9 09 3 58 ..... ' I 7 41 218 Genesee. !8 58 348 I 8 06 2 40 dp Wellsvifle ar 8 3 0 3 20....» | I STATIONS. | j I P. M. P. M. l A. M. ar dp A. M. P.M P. M. 3 05 2 00 7 15 Cross F'k June. 11 00 6 35 3 00 3 55 1 00 6 25 ar Cross Fork dp 11 50 5 4SI 2 Ift *.M. | P. M. A. M. I A.*s 858 I 100 Lv Sinnamahoning, Ar 140 IC6 ' 815 I 140 ar Wharton lv 8001 96g All trains run daily, eptSunday. WSundays onlv. CONNECTIONS, j At Keating Summit with P. R. R. lor all points north and south. At Ansonia with N.Y.C.& IIR. R. for all point» north and south. At Newfleld Junction with C. A P. A. R. R. I west for Coudersport, eaft for Ulysses. At Genesee for points on the New York At i Pennsylvania R. R. At Addison with Erie R. R., for points east and west. At Wellsviile with Erie R. R. for points east and west. At Sinnamahoning with'P. R. R.—P. &E. Div. n.II.OARDINER.Gen'I Pnss'r Agt. Buffalo, N.V W. C. PARK. Gen'l Supt. Galeton. Pa. M. J. MCMAHON, Div. Pass Ag't.,Galeton,Pa. Business Cards. H. W. GREEN, ATTORNEY-AT-LAW, Emporium, Pa. * A businessrelatingto estate,collections, real estates. Orphan's Court and generallaw business will receive prompt attention. 42-ly. J.C.JOHNSON. J. P. MONARNE* JOHNSON & MONARNEY, ATTORNEYS-AT-LAWT EMPORIUM, PA. Will give prompt attention to al! business en,J rusted to them. 16-ly. MICHAEL BRENNAN, ATTORNEY-AT-LAW Collections promptly attended to. Real estate and pension claim agent, 85-ly. Emporium. Pa. THOMAS WADDINGTON, Emporium, Pa., CONTRACTOR FOR MASONRY AND STONE-CUTTING. All orders in my line promptly executed. All 1 !nds of building and cut-stone, supp ed at low prices. Agent for marble or granite monuinenta. Lettering neatly done. AMERICAN HOUSE East Ernporitim, Pa..' JOHN L. JOHNSON. Prop'r. Having resumed proprietorship of this old ami well established House I invite ilie patronage of the public. House newly furnished and thor oughly renovated. 481y F. D. LEET. ITTORNEY-AT-LAW and INSURANCE AG'T. EMPORIUM, PA T» LAND OWNERS AND OTHERS IN CAMKRON AND ADJOINING COUNTIES. I have numerous calls for hem'ock and hard» wood timber lands, also stum page Ac., and parties desiring either to buy or sejl will do well to '-all on me. F. D. I.EET. CITY HOTEL, WM. McGEE, PROPRIETOR Emporium, Pa. Having again taken possession of thlsoldand popular house I solicit a share of the public pat» ronage. The houseis newly furnishedand is out of the best appointed hotels in Cameron county. 30-ly. THE NOVELTY RESTAURANT, (Opposite Post Office,) Emporium, Pa. WILLIAM MCDONALD, Proprietor. I take pleasure in informing the public that J have purchased the old and popular Novelty Restaurant, located on Fourth street. It will be ray endeavor to serve the public in a manner that shall meet with their approbation. Give me a call. Meals and luncheon served at all hour*. n027-lyr WM. McDONALD. BT.CHARLES HOTEL, THOB. J. LYSETT, PROPRIETOR Near Buffalo Depot, Emporium, Pa. This new and commodious hotel is uow opened forthe accommodation of the jjublic. NewintJ its appointments, every attention willbepai' to thcKuestspatronizing'thls hotel. 27-17-ly MAY GOULD, TEACHER OF PIANO, HARMONY AND THEORY, Also dealer in all the Popular sheet Music, Emporium, Pa. Scholars taught either at my home on Sixth street or at the homes of the pupils. Outoftowo scholars will be given dates at my roomsinthis place. P. C. RIECK. D. D. 8., DENTIST.; Office over Taggart's Drug Store, Emporium, Pa, Gas and other local anaesthetics ad» ministered lor the painless extracliou 1.7 TP- of teeth. SPEClALTY:—Preservation of natural teetb, oludiug Crown and Bridge Wcrk.
Significant historical Pennsylvania newspapers