Cameron County press. (Emporium, Cameron County, Pa.) 1866-1922, February 25, 1904, Page 2, Image 2

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    2
CAMUM CUUNTK MUSS.
H. H. MULLIN, Editor.
Published Every Thursday.
TERMS OF SUBSCRIPTION.
ferye»r « »
II paid in advance 1 •' u
ADVERTISING RATES:
Advertisements are published at the rate of
#ne dollar per square tor one Insertion and fifty
•cuts tier square for each subsequent Insertion.
Rales bv the year, or for si* or three months,
•re low and uniform, and will be furnished on
* P Le(tnl"and OfTlclal Advertising per square,
three limes or loss, *2; each subsequent inser
tion !-0 cents per square.
Local notices lu cents per line for one insor
•ertion; E> cents per line for each subsequent
•on--ecutlve Insertion.
Obituary notices over Ave lines. 10 cents per
Une. Simple announcements of births, mar
riages 11 nd deaths will be Inserted free.
Business cards, five lines or less. »5 per year;
over live lines, at the regular rates of adver
*' No* local luserted for less than 75 cents per
•ssue.
JOB PRINTING.
The Job department of the PRESS is complete
•cd affords facilities for doing the best class of
Work. PARTICULAR ATTENTION PA ID TO I>AW
'NO paper will be discontinued until arrear
ages are paid, except ».t the option of the pub
lisher. 4
Papers sent out of the county must be paid
lor in advance. _
The War News.
In the war between Japan and Rus
sia. reports of victories and defeats
reach this country across 15,000 miles
of the ocean's bed The tiny electric
impetus putin motion by the key of
the operator in far Nagasaki instantly
plunges under the eastern sea and
comes to land in China, near Shanghai,
4(6 miles away. Then that little throb
works southward round the China
coast to Hongkong, 945 miles. At
Hongkong (British) it dives under the
China sea to Saigon, in Anam
(French), 951 miles; from Saigon it
crosses the bed of the sea to Singapore
(British), 626 miles. Or it might go by
way of Labuan, Borneo (British), 1,971
miles. Through the Malacca strait to
Tenang (398 miles), and then a great
plunge westward through the wild
Nicobars and under the tropic Bengal
eea (1,389 miles), to Madras. At Madras
it takes to the land until it comes to
Bombay. Never resting the brave lit
tle spark takes to the water again,
traverses the broad Arabian sea to
Aden (1,850 miles), threads its way up
the scorching Red sea, flying ever
westward, to Alexandria (1,534 miles).
And from Alexandria it travels deep
under the balmy Mediterranean to
Malta, out to Lisbon, and so onto
London (3,205 miles), and thence
across the Atlantic. Every word forced
so laboriously through these 15,000
miles of solid wire costs 65 cents. This
is the newly reduced rate for press
messages at which many thousands of
words are being sent. For private
messages the rate is three times larger.
It is difficult to give any very definite
idea of what the war will cos*, the news
papers for telegraphy. Probably few
persons have any idea of the vast sums
which would be swallowed up in a sin
gle day's news provided by the New
York and Chicago newspapers on the
occasion of, say, a great naval battle.
For two short messages from Japan,
consisting of about 100 and 150 words,
respectively, the bare telegraphic cost
approaches $l5O, although some of the
"the's" and "and's" in such cable
grams as they appear in the newspa
pers would not be telegraphed. In the
event of a big battle, it may safely be
assumed that the big American papers
pay thousands of dollars in cable tolls
alone. If the war is to be a hard
fought one, long drawn out, and with
several severe engagements, that sum
may easily be multiplied by 20.
Colonization's Great Cost.
The price of colonization in Africa is
a heavy one, both in life and treasure.
Every European power which has Afri
can possessions pays it. The history
of British interests in the great conti
nent is bloody practically from the be
ginning, and it is still beiug written red
in Somaliland; France has had her
troubles in Algeria, and is constantly
finding fresh ones to the south and along
the Morocco frontier; one of the most
dreadful episodes in Italian history was
worked out in Abyssinia a few years
ago; Portugal has had many conflicts
with the natives; Belgium has the dis
grace of the Congo atrocities, and now
comes Germany with an uprising of
blacks that threatens to overshadow any
thing of the kind that has occurred in
Africa. Surely that vast territory was
aptly named the Dark Continent.
In Mexico they have a way of doing
things to pickpockets that certainly is
discouraging to the profession. In
stead of hauling them up before a jus
tice and fining them "five dollars and
costs" when they probably stole $25, as
they do in Chicago, tlie Mexicans sen
tence them to serve in the army. Pick
pockets are not likely to do a rushing
business in the army, for if anybody
ever heard of a Mexican soldier hav
ing enough money to be worth .steal
ing he never told of it.
An old merchant says that circulars
and booklets can reach but a limited
number of people, and that the most
widely circulated magazines are not
read by a considerable portion of the
public. The newspapers, however, are
read by virtually everybody, and as
"you can never tell who will prove a
profitable customer," the chances are
overwhelming that the newspapers
will reach him where other agencies
will not.
SENATOR M. A. HANNA SUCCUMBS TO THE GRIM REAPER
All the Members of the Senator's Family, with the Exception of Mrs,
Hanna, and Mr, and Mrs. fian Hanna, Were in
the Room When Death Came.
Simple but Impressive Ceremonies Are Held in the Hall of tlie
Senate—President Roosevelt, His Cabinet, Members of
the Senate and House of Representatives, Supreme
Court and Other Notables Were Present.
Washington, Feb. 16. —Senator
Marcus Alonzo Ilanna died at 6:40
o'clock Monday evening at the family
apartments in the Arlington hotel, af
ter on illness extending over nearly
two months, tilled with apparent re
coveries, followed by relapses and
■finally drifting into typhoid fever,
which in his weakened condition he
WP-S unable to withstand. When the
eiiti came all the members of the sen
ator's family were in the room except
Mrs. Ilann if, the senator's wife, and
Mr. ami Mrs. Dan llanna. Mrs. Hanna
had left the room only u few min
utes before.
The last sinking spell began at ex
actly G: .'SO o'clock. I)rs. Carter and
Osier were then in attendance. They
did not conceal the fact that life was
about to end and all members of the
family were sent for. Mrs. McCor
mick, one of the senator's daughters,
and Miss Phelps were present when
the end came. Mr. and Mrs. Dan
Hanna were the first to arrive and
they withdrew immediately to the
chamber of the senator's wife to
summon her to the bedside. It was
while they were absent the senator
breathed his last.
MARCUS ALONZO HANNA.
Tn tlio meantime Mr. McCorinick,
Mr. and Mrs. Parsons and 11. M. Han
na had entered the room. Mr. Dover
stood in the door. There were no
distressing incidents attending 1 the
last moments. It was a sinking spell
which terminated in ten minutes.
Just after his eyes closed in death
Mrs. Ilanna came into the room.
We are indebted to the Cleveland
World for the following biographical
sketch of Senator Ilanna:
Hon. Marcus Alonzo Ilanna was
born September 24, 1837, at Lisbon,
Columbiana county, Ohio. Ills mother
came from a family of .staunch, old
Scotch Presbyterians of Vermont.
His father's family had been Vir
ginia Quakers for about a hundred
years back.
Leonard Ilanna, the father was a
practicing physician in Lisbon, but
finding it was not lucrative enough
to support his family of eight, he
moved to Cleveland in 1552, and or
ganized the grocery firm of Ilanna,
Garretson & Co.
Marcus had attended the schools at
Li ;bon and completed bis public
school education in Cleveland. He
then started in at Western Reserve
University, but after a year at that
institution went to work as a clerk
In his father's store.
In isfia the elder Ilanna died, and
the management of the store de
volved upon Mark. His close atten
tion to business in the five years he
had worked as a clerk stood him in
good stead now, and he conducted
the business very successfully until
the firm dissolved in 1867.
At the age of 30 he married Miss
Rhodes, daughter of Daniel P.
Rhodes, and went into business with
his father-in-law, of the firm of
Rhodes & Co., dealers in coal, iron
ore and pig iron.
In 1577. Mark became senior part
ner of this firm and changed the
name to M. A. Ilanna & Co.
By this time he had learned the
business thoroughly and bad pur
chased mines until his firm was
known all over the country. He
treated his workmen like equals ami
was therefore well-liked by them,
lie was generally successful in
strikes.
I'p to this time he had dabbled a
little in politics and had been sent to
the republican national convention in
ISS4, pledged to nominate John Sher
man.
The first step in active politics was
to orgarize the Cleveland Business
Men's Starching club. He got the
business men oft he city interested in
politics, made them attend their
ward caucuses, and made the club a
CAMERON COUNTY PRESS, THURSDAY, FEBRUARY 25, 1904.
power. In ISSB. Hanna was again
sent to the republican national con
vention as district delegate, and
worked for John Sherman.
In the days when Hanna had been
devoting his time to the coal and iron
business there was a strike in one of
his western Ohio mines, and some of
tlie discontented miners burned sev-
I eral of Ihe mine shafts. Hanna went
| to the district to prosecute them, and
lost bis case. The lawyer for the
miners was William McKinley, and
although defeated by him, Hanna
struck up a warm friendship for Mc-
Kinley.
He began McKinley's preliminary
presidential campaign in 1894 and
1895. In IS'JO he was chosen as chair
man of the national committee, and,
after the hard tight of that year Mc-
Kinley was elected president.
When John Sherman left the
United States senate in 1897 to be
come secretary of state. Gov. Busb-
I nell appointed Hanna to iill out Sher-
I man's term in the senate.
In 1 s!IS lie was elected to the United
States senate by the Ohio legislature
I and was recently re-elected for an-
I other term.
In 1900 lie was again chosen ns
chairman of the national committee,
and again won the tight for McKin
ley.
During- Senator Hanna's political
career he has also been successful in
his business ventures. He was a di
rector in the Globe Shipbuilding Co.,
and president until the recent con
solidation of the Cleveland City Kail
way Co.
Washington, Feb. IS.—ln the pres
ence of the grief stricken family, of
many friends whose sorrow was
scarcely less pronounced, of the sen
ate and house of representatives, of
dignitaries of the other branches of
government and of the chief official
representatives of most of the for
eign powers, the funeral of the late
Senator Hanna occurred Wednesday
in the senate chamber.
In the front rank of the assem
blage gathered about the bier of the
departed statesman sat the presi
dent. He was flanked by the mem
bers of his cabinet. Nearby were the
chief justice anil the associate jus
tices of the supreme court of the
United States, garbed in their black
robes of office.
The religious ceremony was placed
in the hands of Dr. Edward Everett
Hale, chaplain of the senate. The
ceremony began shortly after 12
o'clock, but the gallery doors were
thrown open long before that hour,
and by 11 o'clock fully half the gal
lery seats were occupied. The casket
was borne into the chamber by a
squad of capitol police, and was fol
lowed bv the official committee with
Senator Koraker and Gen. Grosvenor
at its head. Slowly the little proces
sion moved down the main aisle of
the chamber and the casket was
placed upon the catafalque which
was to hold it.
President Pro Tern Frye then ad
dressed the senate.saying: "Senators:
You have solemnly and lovingly dedi
cated this day to an observance of a
proper funeral ceremony over Mar
cus A. Hanna, late a distinguished
member of this body, and all business
will be suspended to that end. We
will unite in prayer with the chap
lain of the national house of repre
sentatives."
Chaplain Couden then offered his
invocation.
ii)iinia*N ISodv Rik Ii to f'levclnml.
Cleveland, Feb. 10.—No tnore
touching tribute has been paid to
the memory of Senator Manila than
that- accorded the funeral cortege as
it moved yesterday from the station
to the chamber of commerce. For
more than two miles along Euclid
avenue, on either side, mourning citi
zens stood in the biting cold with
uncovered heads, to show their re
spect for a fellow-townsman.
At the head was a battalion of
mounted police in command of Chief
Kohler. Then followed the guard of
honor, Troop A, mounted. The fu
neral car was immediately in the
rear. This was closed.
It was ju;t 12 o'clock Thursday
noon when the casket containing
Senator Manila's body was carried
into the chamber auditorium by his
old friends, (iov. Ilerriek, Samuel
Mather, W. 15. Sanders, J. li. Zerbe,
Andrew Squire, C. A. Grasselli, A. li.
llough and \V. J. McKinnie.
From tiie entrance of the chamber
building, through the lobby and to
the exits in the rear stood a double
file of soldiers, the engineers, O. .V.
li. Their blue coats, with bright red
capes, added a touch of color to the
somber scene. As the coffin was car
ried slowly down the aisle the en
gineers stood at "present arms."
Slowly the pallbearers bore the cas
ket to its resting place on the bier,
which stood in the middle of the
auditorium. This bier was the one
used at Canton at the time of Presi
dent, McKinley's funeral, and the flag
that draped it then was used again
Thursday. ISehind the pallbearers
walked Secretary Tod Galloway, the
governor's staff and (Jen. Mylett, re
tired, I'. S. A. Then came the direc
tors of the chamber of commerce,
then a delegation from tne Builders'
exchange, and in the rear a delega
tion from the Tippecanoe club and a
committee representing the Cuya
hoga legislative delegation.
After the casket had been placed
beneath the great canopy of black
that hung over the bier the lid was
removed and an opportunity given
for the close friends of the senator
who had borne his body to take a
final look at his face.
After the pallbearers had viewed
♦ lie remains they were followed bv
the others who had entered with the
casket. The doors'of the auditorium
had meanwhile been closed in order
that the public might be excluded un
til the floral pieces, a carload of
which was brought from Washing
ton, might be arranged. This took
some lime and it was almost 1 o'clock
when the doors were thrown open to
the immense crowd that had been
waiting outside in the cold.
With the snow drifting about their
feet and the icy wind blowing into
their faces, thousands upon thou
sands of Clevelanders stood for hours
Thursday afternoon waiting for a
chance to pass into the auditorium of
the chamber of commerce. Seventy
tive policemen soon had the crowd re
duced to double ranks. Two
abreast they passed into the cham
ber.
The first services to be held in
Cleveland over the remains of Sena
tor llanna were those conducted by
the members of .Memorial post, G. A.
li., Thursday evening. At 9:30 the
chamber of commerce auditorium
was cleared of the general public and
only members of the post admitted.
Senator IIUIIIIII'M Funeral.
Cleveland, Feb. 20. —At noon Friday
the casket containing the body of
Senator llanna was lifted from the
bier on which it had stood for 24
hours, while Cleveland citizens by the
tens of thousands had passed by for
a last, sight of the dead, and was
borne to the hearse.
For five hours Friday morning,
from (i to 11. the public was given its
last, opportunity to see the face of
Senator llanna.
The funeral services were held in
St. Paul's Episcopal church, Euclid
and Case avenues, beginning at 1
p. m.
It was past the noon hour when the
pallbearers carried the casket
through the doors of the chamber of
commerce to the street. Immedi
ately the procession formed in line
for the journey to the church. At
the head rode Chief Kohler with a
squad of mounted police. Next rode
three platoons of Troop A, on black
horses with swords at carry.
The troop preceded the hearse,
which was followed by 100 carriages
carrying the official guests. The pro
cession reached the church at 12:55.
The pallbearers took their seats as
soon as they had deposited the cas
ket. in the nave. (iov. Ilerriek and
his staff filed in and were seated.
The senators and congressmen com
posing the congressional delegation
took the seats reserved for them.
Secretaries of the cabinet. Gov. Dur
bin, of Indiana, and his staff, mem
bers of the state senate and house,
representatives of the National Civic
Federation, Loyal Legion of Honor,
Sons of the American Revolution and
other organizations followed.
After a pause of a few minutes the
services began, conducted by the
clergymen, who had met the body at
the church door. St. Paul's choir
chanted the psalms beginning, "Lord,
let. me know the number of my days,
that 1 will be certified how long 1
live," and "Lord, Thou hast been our
refuge from one generation to an
other." President Pierce of Kenyon
college, read the lesson from 1 Corin
thians. beginning with ttie 20th verse.
"Lead. Kindly Light," a favorite
hymn of the dead man.was suntr by
the choir. I!t. I{ev. W. A. Leonard,
bishop of the diocese of Ohio, deliv
ered ati address eulogizing tlie sena
tor's life.
The anthem. "Lord. Let Me Know
Thy Name," and a benediction pro
nounced by the bishop concluded the
service. The pallbearers again took
up the casket, and as tlicy bore it
from the church, followed by the
mourners, the choir sang the reces
sional, "Sow the Laborer's Work is
O'er."
Hy request, the congregation kept
its seats while the body was being
carried out and the members of the
family were leaving the church and
taking their places in their carriages.
Long before the church was empty,
however, the body of Senator Hanna
was on its way to its temporary rest
ing place in a crypt, in Wade memor
ial chapel at Lake View cemetery.
RESTRICT OUTPUT.
Publishers l'p in Anns Against
tin* Paper Trusts.
If I lie Tnrlfl'oii Wood Pulp Were A liol-
Ished, It IN Claimed, tlic Trusts
Would lit- Forced to .titer
I Their Method* Will
light Combine
New York, Feb. 19. —An important
resolution, touching on the trust
question, was adopted Thursday by
the American Newspaper Publishers'
association, in convention here. The
resolution follows: "liesolved. That
the American Newspaper Publishers'
association request the president of
the United States and the attorney
general to institute a suit against
any of the three paper combinations
to test the legality of their existence
and whether they do not stifle com
petition."
During the discussion preceding
the adoption of the resolution Don
Seitz and John Norris, business man
agers of the New York World and
Times, respectively, attacked the
methods of the International Paper
Co. On behalf of the World Mr.
Seitz offered SIO,OOO toward a fund to
carry on a national agitation for the
•emoval of the duty on wood pulp
for paper making, claiming that this
step was necessary for the welfare
of the newspaper industry.
Mr. Seitz said that the paper situa
tion in the United States is steadily
growing worse, the drouth of the
last three or four months emphasiz
ing the predicament of the newspa
per industry through the operations
of the International Paper Co. The
company, he said, controlling every
factor of the paper-making industry,
had, instead of increasing its facili
ties and accumulating a reserve stock
for emergencies, deliberately set out
to restrict the output of printing pa
per in order to secure complete domi
nation of the market.
During the five years of its exist
ence, he said, it had not putin a sin
gle new machine, had reduced its
output of news paper at least 300 tons
per day and had perfected arrange
ments with independent mills to
maintain prices. Overcapitalized to
begin with, he said, it was impover
ishing itself in purchasing wood
lands at high prices to shut out com
petition and to enrich insiders, the
whole to the ultimate burden of the
newspapers, which could not well in
crease the price of their papers or
advertising.
Mr. Morris, of the Times, declared
that newspapers are today threaten
ed with a paper famine, many of the
papers being on a "hand to mouth"
basis, and that the manufacturers
had deliberately shut down on pro
duction.
Mentioning the various combina
tions in the pa per industry, he de
clared that these methods suggested
the remedy and he urged the forma
tion of a pool of newspaper publish
ers to offer inducements to capital
ists to establish independent mills
outside the trust and ensure reason
able prices for paper.
At the afternoon session the com
mittee to which the subject had been
referred reported in favor of the ac
cumulation of a fund of SIOO,OOO to
promote an agitation "for release
from the oppression of the paper
combination," and this report was
unanimously adopted by the associa
tion.
KILLED IN HIS OFFICE.
Allroolilyn ItusiiicNs Man I * Murdered
by a linn Irom Illinois.
New York, Feb. 11».—George li. Jen
nings, president of the Jennings Ad
justable Shade Co.. was shot and- kill
ed Thursday in his office in Brook
lyn by Frank McXaniara, superin
tendent of one of the departments of
the Elgin Watch Co.'s factory at El
gin, 111. According to two of Jen
nings' clerks, who were in the office,
Jennings and McXaniara were en
gaged in a heated dispute, the sub
ject of which is unknown, when Mc-
Xaniara thrust a revolver against
Jennings' sid». and tired, the bullet
passing through his heart and death
ensuing instantly.
McNamara threw away his revolver
and ran out into the street, pursued
by the two clerks who captured him
and turned him over to the police.
McXaniara refused to say why ho
shot Jennings. He came here a week
ago from Hlgin, where, it is said, he
has a wife and eight children.
BOGUS TENSPOTS.
Brooklyn, N. V., IN Flooded with
Counterfeit Money that Fools Krcn
the ICxpertN.
Xew York, Feb. 19.—The experts at
the United States sub-treasury in
this city have discovered that Brook
lyn is being flooded with an extraor
dinary good counterfeit of the "Buf
falo" ten-dollar bill. About 15 of
these bills have been turned in by
banks in the last fortnight, and near
ly every bill came out of Hrooklyn.
The counterfeit bills are declared
by the experts at the,sub-treasury to
be the best ever seen there. The en
graving of the bills is so good as to
enable them to defy detection evell
ith a glass, and the counterfeiters
ave discovered a way to imitate
the government paper to perfection.
It is only by the "feel" of the bills
that the specimens have been discov
ered so far. The notes are so like
the real ones that the tellers at the
banks have been completely deceived
by them.
Statehood (or Oklahoma.
Washington, Feb. 19.- —As the re
sult of the territorial hearings for
statehood, the prediction is made
from reliable sources that a bill will
be reported in the near future from
the house committee on territories
joining Oklahoma and Indian Terri
tory into a single state under the
name of Oklahoma. This state will
not be admitted, however, until after
the allotment of lands by the Dawes
commission has been completed and
the school land question has been
settled. This will take two years. The
state when admitted will have a pop
ulation of about 800,000.
Jo»t Willi:
Mr. Tucker—l think I shall give up my
business, my dear. I might as well have
some gtx)d out of ray money.
Mrs. Tucker —On, not yet, Samufiir
But when one of us dies, 1 shall give up>
housekeeping and see a little of the
world.—Town and Country.
I'll? <>li-l M Popular.
Watchout—ls Sawdoff really engaged
to that woman? She is twice as big as
he is.
Kiekedout (enviously)—Y-e-s; but
think how handy such a girl is to hide
behind when the old man comes around
—N. Y. Weekly.
The Latent \etvK,
"So you are engaged, I hear, and when
Does the wedding come off," asked
Teddy.
Said Ned. with a sigh for what might have
been,
"I'm afraid It Is off already."
I.AYIMi l)(lUN THE I.AW.
Lady (entertaining friend's little
girl)—Do you take sugar, darling?
The Darling—Yes, please.
Lady—How many lumps?
The Darling—About seven; and
when I'm out to tea I start with cake.
—Punch.
\ot of IIIN Own Aocoril.
Thero was a young scoundrel named Law
rence,
The constable showed him two wawrence;
Said he: "Well, I'll go,
But 1 want you to know
That I go with the utmost abhawrence!"'
—New Yorker.
It Would Sceiu .So.
"Say, pa," queried little Johnny
Bumpernickle, "what's a Hying ma
chine?"
"A Hying machine, my son," replied
the old man, "is a vehicle used by peo
ple who dwell in air castles." —Cincin-
nati Enquirer.
I it recorded Hl*tory.
Hamlet was giving his soliloquy.
"He's so glad to get a chance to talk,"'
whispered Ophelia; "he just came from
the barber's."
In the light of this explanation, it was
simple to see why he said so much. —
Brooklyn Life.
Deep lteuMoniiiK.
Photographer—Don't assume such a
fierce expression. Look pleasant.
Murphy—Not on your life. My wife
is going to send one of these pictures
to her mother, and if I look pleasant
she'll come down on a visit. —Philadel-
phia Record.
Business Cards.
B. W. GREEN,
ATTORNEY-AT-LAW,
Emporium, Pa.
A businessrelatingto estate,collections.real
Mtntes. Orphan's Court and general law bust nest
iril 1 receive promptattention. 42-ly.
J.C. JOHNSON. J. P. MCNAHNE*
JOHNSON & MoNARNEY.
ATTORNEYS-AT-LAW*
EMPOitltrf, PA.
Will give prompt attention to all business enj
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 WADDINOTON,
Emporium, Pa.,
CONTRACTOR FOR MASONRY AND
STONE-CUTTING.
All orders in my line promptly executed. All
Hinds of building and cut-stone, supp -ed at loir
prices. Agent for marlple pr granite monument*.
Lettering neatly done.
AMERICAN HOUSE.
East Emporium, Pa.. .
JOHN L. JOHNSON, Prop'r,
Having resumed proprietorship of this old and
well established House I invite the patronage ol
the public. House newly furnished and thor
oughly renovated. 481y
F. D. LEF.T.
ATTORNEY-AT-LAW and INSURANCE AG'T.
EMPORIUM, PA
LAND OWNERS AND OTHERS IN CAMERON AND
ADJOINING COUNTIES.
I have numerous calls for hemlock and hard,
wood timber lands,also stumpage&c., and parties
desiring either to buy or sell will do well to -all
on me. F. D. LEET,
CITY HOTEL,
WM. McGEE, PROPRIETOB
Emporium, Pa.
Having again taken possession of thisoldand
popular house I solicit a share of the public pat
ronage. The house is newly furnishedand is one
of the best appointed hotels in Cameron county,
30-ly.
THE NOVELTY RESTAURANT,
(Opposite Poat OlHce,)
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 b«
my endeavor to serve the public in a niannei
that shall meet with their approbation. Give me
a call. Meals and luncheon served at all hours,
uo'27-lyr Wm. McDONALD.
ST. CHARLES HOTEL,
THOS. J. LYBETT, PaopiUETOB
Near Buffalo Depot, Emporium, Pa.
This new and commodious hotel is now opened
forthe accommodation of the public. Newintl
itsappointments, every attention willbepai< to
the guests patronizing this notel. 27-17-1 y
KAY GOULD,
TEACHER OF
PIANO, HARMONY AND TnEORY,
Also dealer in all the Popular sheet Music,
Emporium, Pa.
Scholars taught either at my home on Sixth
itreet or at the homes of the pupils. Outoftown
scholars will be given dates at my rooms in thig
place.
P. C. RIECIC. D. D. S
DENTIST.;
Office over TnKgart's Drug Store, Emporium, Pa.
r — —v, Gas and other local anaesthetics »a«
."'nl«tered for the paiuless exlracfJo»
<i/TTTr # of;eeth. ,
SPEClALTY:—Preservation of n»4ural teeth, l»
lludjug Crown aud Bridge WMt