Cameron County press. (Emporium, Cameron County, Pa.) 1866-1922, March 31, 1904, Page 8, Image 8

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    8
JOS. A. FREINDEL. GEO. E. HURTEAU
Freindle lMot
General
Hardware,
Stoves, Tinware, Etc.
Since opening our new store
we have been kept on the jump
continually arranging our new
goods. We have not had time
to tell the PRESS readers what
we are doing, scfthey are all in
vited to call and see for them
selves.
Our line of goods now com
prise a full line of
Hardware, Stoves,
(warden and
Farming
Impliiueiits,
General
House Furnishings,
Paints, Oils and
Varnishes.
In fact anythingyou may need*
If we have not what you want
we will order for you on short
notice.
Our prices are right and we
will not be undersold.
Plumbing, Roofing
and Tin Work,
Having had eighteen years ex
perience in this department we
guarantee all work entrusted to
us. Keep your eye on this
space.
FREINDEL & HURTEAU.
j Adam, \
j Meldrum & j
Anderson Co. i
) HUFPAIiO.N. V. >
* 396-408 Main Street, J
1 Rugs and j
I Carpets, j
£ No matter what the color or >
\ size rug you desire there is just \
S the thing in this vast stock of )
} ours. We are the only direct I
> importers of rugs in Buffalo, >
Sand we have the largest and best J
J assortment of perfect rugs to >
> be found west of New York City. \
} Antique Persians }
s of rare beauty in all sizes. We )
J have a splendid lot of these in >
\ various sizes which we are sell- \
S ing as low as §2O. J
c Our stock of Persian, Indian 3
% and Turkish rugs in carpet sizes \
s is not equalled in this country. )
> Domestic Rugs \
c Over 150 designs in the differ- \
sent sizes of Wiltons, Axministers 1
< and Body Brussels. P
j Carpets
£ All the new patterns for spring \
\ are now shown in all their beau- \
t ty and richness of design and \
? color effects— c
} AXMINISTERS, 5
i WILTONS, \
> BODY BRUSSELS, }
\ TAPESTRY, 112
{ INGRAINS, <
r in all reliable makes and exclu- s
3 eive patterns. \
j MAILORDERS. All mail orders j
% are filled the same day received. 1
\ Send for Samples. 2
> Adam, ?
c Meldrum & r
\ Anderson Co.
112 The American Block, J
| BUFFALO, N. Y. |
Tragedy Averted.
' Just in the nick ot time our little
boy was saved" writes Mrs. W. Watkins
of Pleasant City, Ohio. "Pneumonia had
played sad havoc with hiiu and a terrb
ble cough set in besides. Doctors treat
ed him, but he grew worse every day.
at length we tried Dr. King's New Dis
covery for Consumption, and our darl
ing was saved. lie's now sound, and
well.'' Everybody ought to know, it's
the only sure cure for Coughs, Colds
and all Lung diseases. Guaranteed by L.
Ta<;gart Druggist. Price 50cand 81.00.
Trial bottles free.
McClure's For April.
McClure's for April is fairly stunning
in its effect. ' The first of a series of
articles on"The Enemies of the Re
public," by Lincoln Steffens, which
will consider the mis government of
states, takes up Missouri and gives the
readers a shock he will not soon for
get. It is almost paralyzing in its re
lentless array of fact and logic concern
ing corruption as a custom, a system,
a revolution in government.
Ida M. Tarbell follows close with an
account of the a.leged ' Breaking up of
the Trust" in her "History of the Stan
d <rd Oil Company." She gives the re
sults of legislative investigations and
court procedings against the Company
which forced it into publicity and reor
ganization.
Thomas Nelson Page goe3 right to
the heart of the Negro Problem and
uncovers some of its "Difflcutlies and
Fallacies" in the second paper on that
subject.
"Dreams of Happiness" are present
ed and interpreted by John La Farge
in the third paper of his series on "One
Hundred Master pieces of Painting."
Seven live short stories make up the
fiction ot the number.
Justus Miles Forman unmasks the
soul of a man who will notallow wealth
or society or family to turn him aside
from his pursuit of art for Art's sake
in Andrea del Sarto" "A Modern
Adam" in a manless world which he
has caused and fears is a fanciful
dream by F. J. Stimson. "The Way
it Was" is described by George Hih--
bard in a story of two young New
Yorkers who fled from] love to the
slums and there found it.
Divorce Notice.
Stephen W. White ) Iu tho Court of Common
vs > Pleas of Cameron County.
Carrib WiiiTsr ) No. 3, July Term, 1903.
SUBPOENMN DIVORCEE.
To CARRIE WHITE, Respondent:
~V R OU ure hereby notified to appear at the next
1 term of court to be liolden at Emporium,
Cameron county, Pa., commencing on Monday,
25th day of April, A. I).. 1901, at one o'clock, p.
m,, and answer to the complaint of said liabell
ant and answer to the charge, and show cause if
any you have, why decree should not be made,
divorcing the said libellant from the bonds of
matrimony which be has contracted with you,
and if you fail to appear then and there such de
cree will be made in yourabsence.
HARRY HEMPHILL, High Sheriff.
Sheriffs Oflice, j
Emporium, Pa., March 23, 1901. { 6-It.
PROCLAMATION.— Whbiibas: —The
V_' Hon. Chas. A. Mayer President Judge and
the Hons. John McDonald and Geo. A.Walkhr,
Associate Judges of Courts of Oyer and Terminer
and General Jail Delivery, Quarter Sessions ot
the Peace, Orphans' Court and Court of Common
Pleas for the county of Cameron have issued
their precept bearing date the 28th day of Febru
ary, A. D., 1904, and to me directed for holding
Court of Oyer and Terminer, General Jail De
livery, Quarter Sessions of the Peace
Orphans' Court and Court of Common Pleas
in the Borough of Emporium, Pa., on Monday,
the 25th day of April 1904, at 10 o'clock, a. in.,
and to continue one week.
Notice ishereby given to the Coroners, Justice*
of the Peace and Constables within the county,
that they be then and there in their proper per
sons, at 10 o'clock, a. m., of said day, with tneir
rolls, records, inquisitions, examinations, and
other rememberances, to do those things which
to their offices appertain to be done. And those
who are bound by their recoguizanceto prosecute
against them as will be just.
Dated at Emporium, Pa., March 29th, 1901,
and in the 127t1i year of the Independence of the
United States of America.
HARRY HEMPHILL. Sheriff.
LIST OF CAUSES.
T IST OP CAUSES SET DOWN FOR TRIAL
JJ at Aoril Term of Court for 1901, com
mencing Monday, April 25th.
No. 6. January Term, 1901.
Eugene Kellcy, Executor of the estate ofA.G.
Kelly deceased vs S. S. llackct, now 11. 8.
Hacket, S. J. Hacket and T. N. Hacket, Execu
tors of the last Will and Testament of S. S.
Hacket, deceased.
P. 1). Leet for Pit!'.
Green <X: Shaffer tor Deft.
No. 1, April Term, 1903.
Charles Gierstorf vs L. G. Cook.
No. 2, April Term, 1903.
Charles Gierstorf vs L. G. Cook.
No. 4, April Term, 1903.
R.J. Lloyd vs W. 11. Truesdalo.
Green & Shaffer, for Plff.
Johnson & McNarney, for Deft.
No. Gl, April Term, 1903.
John W. Norris vs 11. VV. Martindale.
K. J. Jones, for Plff.
Green & Shatter, for Deft.
No. 27, October Term, 1903.
L. E. GiObs for the use of Prank Overhiser, vs
Aim on Matteson.
Green <fc Shaffer for Deft.
No. 33, October Term, 1903.
W. 11. Jollolf vs M. It. If el Iyer.
Johnson & McNarney for Deft.
No. 32, April Term, 1904.
Kalin Brothers vs J. 11. Evan*.
Johnson & McNarney, for Plff.
Green & Shaffer, for Deft.
C.JAY GOODNOUGH,
Prothonotary.
Easy and Quick!
Soap=Making
with
BANNER LYE
To make the very best soap, simply
dissolve a can of Banner I.yc in cold
water, melt 3y z lbs. of grease, pour the
Lye water in the grease. Stir and put
aside to set.
Full Directions on Every Package
Banner Lye is pulverized. The can
may be opened and closed at will, per
mitting the use of a small quantity at a
time. It is just the article needed in
every household. It will clean paint,
floors, marble and tile work, soften water,
disinfect sinks, closets and waste pipes.
Write for booklet "Uses of Banner
Lye" —free.
The P.nn Chemical Works, Philadelphia:
CAMERON COUNTY PRESS, THURSDAY, MARCH 31, 1904.
Vividly Described.
The reporter from whose account of
n lire the following Is quoted must
himself, says the representative of a
rival journal, have been in great dan
ger of being consumed by the fire of
his own eloquence:
"The water seemed to spur the lire to
wilder deeds. The flames and the
Binoke rolled higher and higher, and
the scene became luridly, awfully mng
nlflcent, beyond tottering words' power
to paint. It was a canto of Dante's
•Inferno' acted In all Its fiery pomp
and splendor. Banners of flame would
now be waved out by dark smoke
bands, then ten million curling little
pennons of the fire would hiss and
flutter, then vanish, and a great reeling
tower of. smoke, whose darkness was
Stabbed and spangled with flames and
sparks, would fill the buildings, grimly
shoot back from reflected surfaces a
crimson greeting, and up in the far
off sky the outglistened stars turned
pale for shame and the moon through
the drifted smoke glowed like a bowl
of blood."
A Mlnnoiirl Miliiclin iinrn.
There are some pretty fair Nimrods
In Missouri now, but a story which is
printed in an old history of Callaway
county shows that some of those of
former days could make contemporary
sportsmen look like IJO cents either
as shots or as raconteurs. "Mr. Cal
vin Tate," according to this history,
"says that the wild pigeons were so
plentiful one summer that frequently
when they would alight on a tree it
would bend down to the ground with
their welgfit. He went hunting one
day, and seeing a fine lot of pigeons
In a tree he hitched his horse to one
of the limbs and fired and killed 300 nt
one shot. The rest flew away, and as
soon as the tree was relieved of their
weight it straightened up, carrying his
horse with it, and the poor brute had
to hang there until Tate could go home
and get an ax and cut the tree down."
—Kansas City Journal.
India Rubber.
Few articles seem more strangely
nnmed than India rubber. It gets the
"rubber" from the first use to which
It was put—that of erasing pencil
marks by rubbing. Nor should It be
associated with India. The tree was
first mentioned by an explorer among
the Mexican Indians three centuries
ago, and the first account of the sub
stance occurs in connection with Co
lumbus' visit to Haiti on Ills second
voyage. Most of our present Importa
tion comes from Brazil. But Colum
bus and those explorers who followed
him were searching for a short passage
to India, and they supposed that the
land they discovered was India. The
name India rubber is therefore a per
manent sign of their mistake.
The Indian mid 11 C.HN Furnace.
Just before gas begun to be used In
Pawliuska 0110 of the Osage braves
visited Bartlesville and got his first
glimpse of a gas lire. All he could see
in the stove was a pile of> redhot
bricks, through the crevices of which
the blue flames were curling. lie said
nothing, but before starting home he
went to the yard and bought a lot of
brick and hauled them home. He
burned up six boxes of matches and
all the dry wood his wife had cut try
ing to get the bricks to burn and final
ly hauled them back to Bartlesvilla
and told the yard man they were no
good.—Pawhuska (Okla.) Capital.
Tlae Tibetans.
The Tibetans are not beautiful. How
could they be when, by their own con
fession, the national ancestry runs
back to the king of the monkeys and
a hobgoblin? Bonvalot says of them,
"The very bears are better looking."
The type is midway between the Es
kimo and the Chinese. Broad, flat
noses, without visible bridge; no eye
brows, wide mouths, full lips, oily
skins, hair as coarse and straight as
horsehair, and short, square, ungainly
figures—these are the elements of the
unpleasing picture.
Talking Knj£li»!i.
Here is a story that comes from Lon
don and illustrates the peculiarities of
the American boy: The youngster was
at the Hotel Cecil, and be listened in
tently to a group of English folks.
Suddenly he looked up at his mother.
"Sa3% ma, ilo these people talk Eng
lish';" "Certainly they do, my child.
What a question!" "Then we don't,"
said the cub.
An Old Testnment Verne.
The twenty-first verse of the seventh
chapter of Ezra in the Old Testament
contains all the letters of the alphabet.
"And I, even I Artaxerxes the king, do
make a decree to all the treasurers
which are beyond the river, that what
soever Ezra, the priest, the scribe of
the law of the God of heaven, shall re
quire of you, it be done speedily."
tier (iuod Point.
Even the most Impulsive women
have their good traits.
An Irishman, mourning his late wife,
tearfully remarked:
"Faith, she was a good woman. She
always bit me wid de soft ind av the
broom."
Hon to Hold At-torn.
"It always makes me mad to talk to
an actor, lie pretends to listen polite
ly, but his attention is wandering all
the time. Ever notice It?"
"No; I always talk to them about
themselves."—Philadelphia Ledger.
IIIN Waterloo.
Hewitt—CJruet has lost all his money.
Jewett—But I thought he was a Napo
leon of finance. Hewitt—He was, but
he met a Wellington.
Take a good book slowly. You see
much finer country In a mover's wagon
than you do from n oar window.
WASHINQTON LETTER.
(From our Regular Oorretpondent.)
Washington, March 2(», 1904.
Editor Press:—
Congress, as well as the Execu
tive, has had many difficult and
perplexing questions to contend
with, and it has required much
tact, wisdom and patience to meet
them. Many of the problems have
been solved; others have been post
poned to a more convenient season;
while a few remain to vex political
parties. On the whole legislation
has proceeded with commendable
rapidity, and with caution. It is
extremely difficult to introduce
new measures and transform them
iuto laws, or indulge in any ex
perimental legislation, in the face
of a presidential campaign. If
many good measures fail the
public will understand that it is
not that they are of themselves bad,
but because Congress hesitates to
expend large sums when it is neces
sary to practice economy to retain
the confidence of the people. The
Post Office bill made slow progress
through the House, and was close
ly scrutinized, a result to be ex
pected since so many Congressmen
still feel sore over the Bristow re
port. Publishers of papers are
anxious that rural delivery carriers
may be allowed to distribute the
fruit of the press. By the close
vote of 8K ts 80, out of a total
membership of 480, the House
agreed to give the Southern Rail
road a subsidy of $142,728.75 to
carry fast mails from Washington
to New Orleans via Atlanta. Chi
cago is to be allowed SIOO,OOO for
mail service in its underground
tunnel system. A general investi
gation of the Post Office has again
been voted down in the House, but
in the Senate the Democrats have
given notice that they propose to
assume an aggresive attitude in
favor of an investigation. The
proposition to give a steamship
company $45,000 a year to carry
the mails to the island of Tahiti,
"a pin head in the Pacific," has
been rejected. At the close of
yesterday's debate, the Post Office
appropriation bill passed the House
to the great relief of Republicans.
The great Chinese question will
soon occupy public attention.
The Exclusion Treaty with China
expires by limitation 011 the 27th
of December. As China has form
ally denounced the treaty a new
one will have to be formulated
which will be acceptable to both
countries. It is claimed that many
great employers of labor are in
favor of admitting the Chinese,
and that a new exclusion treaty
has no chance of again being rati
fied. It is already proposed to
import some 40,000 Chinese iuto
the canal zone of Panama to dig
the big ditch, which can hardly
be constructed without their aid.
AVe spend millions in missions for
the conversion of the Chinese.
What stultifications to say th ey
may be good enough for heaven but
not good enough for the United
States.
There is still much controversy
and indecision in the House over
the proposed impeachment and
trial of Judge Swayne of Florida.
It is feared that if a trial is begun
it may continue for a long while
and postpone the adjournment of
Congress. And there is doubt
about the verdict. Since the
charges against the Judge have
been given to the House by the
com ui ittee he should either be
vindicated, or found guilty. It
would be ungracious and inequit
able to legislate him out of office
without an investigation. The
Judge has filed a brief in which he
denies the charges.
WANTED: 50 MEN AND WOMEN
L. Tasgart the enterprising druggist,
ie advertising today for fifty men aud
women to take advantage oft lit;
special halt-price offer lie is making
on Dr Howard's celebrated specific fur
the cure of constipation and dyspepsia,
and get a fifty cent package at half-price
25 cents.
£0 positive is he of the remarkable
power of this specific to cure ihese dis
eases as well as sick headaches and liver
troubles, that he agrees to refund the
money to any customer whout this niedi
einc dots not quickly relieve and cure.
If you cannot call nt L. Ta»gart's store
to-day, send him 25 cents by mail, and he
will send jour a package promptly,
charges paid. 2-1 m.
I Now Ready for Spring. 1
B W/l 3 ' have just received a fine
■ ™ line of CLOTHING for the
8 Spring trade and if you want
H that are strictly up to date
fl§ you should see our stock. Our
Clothing is perfect in style, !
|§ workmanship and fit, for solid J
~p°V • 4
comfort and our guarantee accom- j
||| panics every article we sell. We
v want all our customers tcT be
perfectly satisfied. Never any
4 chance for a kick. We have pur
| chased a large stock for the spring
■ trade, and our goods are sure to
please in every particular.
The place to buy your clothing is
where you are [sure to get your
moneys worth and we think you
can find no better place than here.
I Our prices are always reasonable.
Gents' Furnishing Goods, Shoes,
Hats. Shirts and in fact every
thing to dress you in an up-to-date
manner. Come in and see us and
get acquainted.
I Jasper Harris,
T he People's Clothier. §
♦ I am n QrUfUCPC but °on't forget these £
LUUa tLoty rltnt PRICES and facts A t y
JLABAR'SJ
S3O Bedroom Suite, solid COC S4O Sideboard, quartered tfQft v<
<*j oak at 4)20 oak, 4>OU
112 S2B Bedroom Suits, solid tfOI $32 Sideboard, quartered tfOC •£-
oak at 3ZI oak, 4)Zu
n oak at 4>ZU oak, J>ID Q
A large line of Dressers from Chiffloniers of all kinds and 5*5
$8 up. prices. Q"
$ $
We carry in stock the
W / fjl)r I! □ >;jk ( largest line of Carpets u
Q ( [©-■ Jj _Jj S V/ _ i'LkZ.' hi] Linoleums and Mattings JQ.
v ¥ of all kinds ever brought W
||fe to Emporium. Also a big
I j' N . Curtains that can- U
r not nui - tc ' an y wliere $
$ *^ rt Squares and Rugs
lr^" n l ' ie c ' lea P es '- 10 the jjjj
H ' . . hi "" Ui "" i
w A large and elegant line of Tufted and Drop-head w
$ Couches. Beauties and at bargain prices.
♦
.Q, The finest line of Sewing Machines 011 the market,
W the "Domestic" and "Eldredge". All drop heads and u'
ft warranted.
A fine line of Dishes, common grade and China, in W
sets and by the piece. q
As I keep a" full line of everything that goes to make
W up a good Furniture store, it is useless to enumerate them
ft a"- ' &
L' Please call and see for yourself that lam telling you y
£1 the tiuth, and if you don't buy, there is 110 harm done, as JU,
it is 110 trouble to show goods.
1 GEO. J. LaBAR. 112
k r