Cameron County press. (Emporium, Cameron County, Pa.) 1866-1922, April 28, 1904, Image 4

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    o<arr)e.iwr) (iaurjfy J^i»ess.
ESTABLISIHD BY O. B. GOULD.
HENRY H. MULLIN,
Editor and Manager.
PITIMiISH El> EVERY THURSDAY
TERMS OF SUBSCRIPTION:
Per year •* 00
If paid is advance ' r '®
ADVERTISING RATES.
\dverttsementi-are publishedat the rate ofone
dollar per square for one insertion and fifty ceuts
per square for eacb subsequent insertion.
Rates by the year or for six orthreemontbsare
low auu uniform, and will be furnished on appll
-1 Y.'.'izal and Official Advertising persquare. three
times or less, fi 00; each subsequent insertionSO
Ce ",ocaTnoticesteucents per line for oneinsertion,
ftve cents per line for cachsubscquentconsecutive
""obituary notices over five lines, ten cents per
lfne. Sirapleannouncements of births, marriages
awl deaths will be inserted free.
Business Cards, five lines or less $5.00 per year
over five lines, at the regular rates of advertising
Nolocalinsertedfor less than 75 cts. per issue.
JOB PRINTING.
The Job department of the PRESS is complete,
and affords facilities for doing the best class of
«rork. PARTICULAR ATTENTION PAID TO Law
P N'O paper willbe discontinued until arrearages
are paid, except at the option ofthe publisher.
Papers sent out ofthe county must be paid for
in advance.
<WNo advertisements will be accepted at less
than the price for fifteen words.
tf jf-Relifeious notices free. ,
REPUBLICAN TICKET.
State.
Eor Supreme Court Judge,
JOHN P. ELKIN.
County.
For Congress,
8. R. DRESSER, Bradford.
For General Assembly.
JOSIAH HOWARD, Emporium.
For County Treasurer,
DU. EUGENE O. BARDWELL. Emporium.
EDITORIAL riENTION.
•'Coin' ? Harvey says silver is a
dead issue. For he is no presi
dent of a railroad—§lo,ooo salary.
Prosperity is still blooming.
Last mouth this country sent to
Europe 45,000 tons of iron and
iteel.
If Judge Parker really proposes
to run, he ought to have some
photographs taken with the cus"
tomary scowl omitted.
Judge Parker is afraid that Mr.
Bryan will add to the nominating
convention a little Palmer-Buckner
side-show of his own.
Olney has carried two-thirds of
the delegation to the St. Louis con
vention from Massachusetts.
Hearst was the favorite in the
cities.
in Alabama Congress Rmkhead
bis got away with Hobsou's bottl
ing outfit. Is it possible that the
3p i lish war is fading in import
ance.
The government will very gen
erously pay 840,000 to allow the
printers in the Public Printing Of
fice thirty days leave of absence.
This looks like an open shop.
The President has ordered a
great naval display on the coast of
Europe this summer Our combin
ed squadrons in the Mediterranean
are expected to number sixteen
warships.
Russia's announcement that
correspondents using the wireless
telegragh will b;> treated as spies if
caught, is being resented by Great
Britain and the United States.
The determination is uot likely to
be acted on.
The Health Officer of Washing
ton has discovered a simple means
by which the germs, or microbes
oi' tuberculous, pneumonia and
typhoid fever may bo destroyed.
The world will be delighted to get
this valuable knowledge, if it is
not for sale in bottles.
The paper trust has putin a
general denial before the House
Judiciary Committee, that it is a
trust. It says such allegations are
as thin as tissue paper and will not
hold water any more than a paper
bag. The publishers of news
papers have another opinion on
the subject.
The civilized world mourns the
loss of Verestchagin. the Russian
battle-painter, who was a guest of
Admiral Makaroff and perished
with him in the destruction of the
battleship. This artist was the
greatest living painter of battle
3cenes. His work, moreover, was
always in the interest of humanity
—intended to make war seem as
barbarous and gastly as it is.
WASHINGTON LETTER.
(From our Regular Correspondent.)
Washington, April 2. r >, 1904.
Editor P*eas:--
The present session of Congress
has been a business session. A
sum amounting to almost $700,-
000,000 lias been appropriated for
carrying on the government, and
forwarding those great enterprises
to which it is committed. Mr.
John Sharp Willians, the minority
Democratic House leader from
Mississippi, complains that many
abstract and purely political ques
tions have been ignored or per
mitted to rest until next December
on the plea of want of time. lie
would have the trusts prosecuted,
the reciprocity treaties ratilied, the
Filipinos granted more rights, a
nearer approach to free trade with
Canada, and a general reduction of
the tariff. Mr. Hamilton, member
from Michigan, "threw down the
gauntlet" a few days ago, in which
he vindicated the present policy of
the Republican party, upheld its
present tariff policy not only as a
necessity for giving the govern
ment its needed revenue, but as
the chief factor in the prosperity of
the times. He said that if there is
any wide-spread dissatisfaction
with the tariff the people will have
an opportunity to give an expres
sion of their feelings at the polls
next November. The Pension bill
carrying $127,000,000 has passed.
Senator Scott, of W. Va., said
that if lie could have his way he
would give a pension of $25 per
month to every Union man, rich
or poor, who took up arms in the
Civil War. There was some
speech-making in the House
against giving the President con
trol of the Panama canal zone, but
when the bill came to a vote it
passed unanimously. The only
appropriation bills still before Con
gress are the General Deficency and
the Military Academy.
There is a bill before Congress
which declares that after June 29,
1907, when a clerk in the civil ser
vice reaches the age of 70 years his
position shall be vacant. There
are some two-hundred or more
clerks of this age employed in
Washington, and there are a
number of Senators who are over
seventy. Congress is considerate
in giving the aged clerks three
years' notice.
The question of Morinonism and
plural wives is again before the
public, owing to the frank confes
sions and admissions of Agnus
Cannon and 1-jx-Congressman l»rig
hain 11. Roberts. Three of Mr.
Roberts wives have been account
ed for and Mr. Cannon lias said
the astonishing statement that he
married two of his six wives at the
same hour. This is quite as bad as
progressive divorce, which only
permits a man to marry several
wives in succession. Senator Reve
ridge is strongly in favor of Sena
tor Smoot retaining his seat. Ac
cording to a Mr. Cobb, of Roise
City. Idaho, the Mormons hold
the balance of power in that state.
Senator Dußois wishes to know if
any post masters in Idaho are liv
ing in polygamy. If they are any
such they should be excluded from
j the mails.
The Washington Sanitary llous
iug Company is the name of a new
society which has for its object the
acquiring of land and the building
of sanitary houses for the poor.
The rent is to be low. The intent
is to do away with the unsanitary
houses which now crowd the alleys
of the city, and are a menace to
both health and morals. Jacob
Itiss, the biographer of the Presi
dent, recently called public atten
tion to the deplorable condition
which prevail in Washington.
Kobbedthe Grave.
A .startling incident, is narrated by
John Oliver of Philadelphia, as follows:
"I was in an awful condition. My skin
was almost yellow, eyes sunken, tongue
coated, pain continually in back and
sides, no appetite, growing weaker day
by day. Three physicians had given
me up. Then I was advised to use
Electric Ritters; to my great joy, the
first bottle made a deccided improvement.
I continued their use for three weeks,
and am now a well man. I know they
robbed the grave of another victim."
No one should i'ail to try theui. Only
50 cents, guarantee, at L. Taagart's drug
store.
CAMERON COUNTY PRESS, THURSDAY, APRIL 28, 1904.
Solatia Rheumatism Cured. 1
"I have been subject to sciatic rheu-1
matism for years," says E. H. Waldron, '
of Wilton Junction, lowa. "My joints >
were stiff and gave me much pain and |
discomfort. My joints would crack 1
when I straightened up. I used Cham- |
berlain's Pain Bahn and have been thor- j
oughly cured. Have not hud a pain or j
ache from the old trouble for many j
months. It is certainly a most wonder- j
ful liniment." For sale by Jno. K.
Smith, Sterling Run.
Uncover the cause ot siu and you dis- !
cover its cure.
Nothing Equal to Chamberlain's Colic,
Cholera and Diarrhoea Remedy for
Bowel Complaints in Children.
"We have used Chamberlain's Colic,
Cholera and Diarrhoea Remedy in our
family for years," says Mrs. J. B. Cooke,
of Ntjderlands, Texas. "We have given
it to all ot our children. We have used
other medicines for the same purpose,
but never found anything to equal Cham
belain's. If you use it as directed it will
always cure. For sale by L. Taggart.
An argument is used to promote un
necessary conversation.
Good Spirits.
Good spirits don't all come from Ken
tucky. Their main source is the liver—
and all the fine spirits ever made in the
Blue Grass State could not remedy a bad
liver or the hundred-and- one ill effects it
produces. You can't have good spirits
and a bad liver at the same time. Your
liver must be in fine condition if you
would feci buoyant, happy and hopeful,
bright of eye, light of step, vigorous and
successful in your pursuits. You can put
your liver in fine condition by using
Green's August Flower—the greatest of
all medicines for the liver and stomach
and a certain cure for dyspepsia or indi
gestion. It has been a favorite household
remedy for over thirty-five years. Aug
ust Flower will make your liver healthy
and active and thus insure you a liberal
supply of "good spirits." Trial size, 25c;
regular bottles, 75c. At all druggists.
Revenge is sweetest when renounced.
The best physic: Chamberlain's
Stomach and Liver Tablets. Easy to
take; pleasant in effect. For sale by Jco.
E. Smith, Sterling Run.
Obedience is better than obligation.
AOreat Sensation.
There was a big sensation in Leesville,
Ind., when \V. 11. Brown of that place,
who was expected to die, bad his life
saved by Dr. King's New Discovery for
Consumption. He writes: "I endured
insufferable agonies from Asthma, but
your new Discovery gave me immediate
relief and soon thereafter effected a com
plete cure." Similar cures of Consump
tion, Pneumonia. Bronchitis and < Irip
are numerous. It's the peerless remedy
for all throat ami lung troubles. Price
50c, and SI.OO. Guaranteed by L. Tag
gart, Druggist. Trial bottles free.
Character is ebrystaliss -d conduct.
THE LADIES favor painting their
churches, and therefore we urge every
Minister to remember we give a liberal
quantity of th.i Longman & Martinez
Paint toward the painting.
Wears and covers iike gold.
Don't pay 81.50 a gallon for Linseed
Oil (worth 00 cents) which you do when
you buy other paints in a can with a
paint label on it.
8 & G make 14, therefore when you
want fourteen gallons of paint, buy only
eight of L. & M., and mix six gallons
pure Linseed Oil with it.and thus get
paint at less than 81.20 per gallon.
Many houses are well painted with
four gallons of L. & M., and three gal
lons of Linseed Oil mixed therewith.
These Celebratad Paints are sold by
Harry S. Lloyd. 2
The theatrical manager would rather
have a full house than four of a kind.
Makes a Ole in Sweep.
There's nothing like doing a thing
thoroughly. Of all the salve you ever
heard of, Buekleu's Arnica Salv.> i.i the
best. It sweeps away and cures Burns,
Soros, Bruises, Cuts, Boils, Ulcers, Skin
Eruptions and Piles. It's only 25c, aud
guaranteed to give satisfaction by L.
Taggarf, Druggist.
Warning.
All persona are hereby forbidden from
trespassing upon the property of this
Company without a permit from this
office, or the Superintendant at the
works.
KEYSTONE POWDEK MFG. CO.
Emporium, Pa., August Ist, 1903.
21- tf.
I | I Laughlin A I
Is Fountain M I
ill Pcn is
W JR&JB 18 THE PEER OF ALL SHRlll jjd
pens and has no sa«"lq (ll
'lit EQUAL ANYWHERE. jj
h Hi finest grade !4K - II 1N
1 |l| GOLD PEN
~f I«i YOUR CHOICE OF THESE jfflß I
fli |S TWO POPULAR STYLES FOR ffiPj fl l J ;
If) |p| ONLY s|; j 111
fl SI 00 i f
IB i I 1
il l #1 SUPERIOR TO OTHER §1 I jj
I H «"»" »
S5 Eg § The Laughlin FountAin ftjjJHK; M Jjf
(|| IEjU Fen Holder is made of fin- ! |
—' '"S"™*a est quality bard rubber, is IIJKt M I |
[FI Hi fitted with highest grade, tifHHL if
'I wl large size. 14k. gold pen, MBSt If ||
-.(ll 3 of any desired flexibility,
j v i and has the only perfect ]]
i feeding device known. ' J
j Either style, richly gold M ) |
r.l I l . mounted, for presentation BB® W _.|
|. l l purposes, 11.50 extra.
|TI Surely you will not be £MLy '5
ili I " r ri able to secure anything at JsWl ifl | ]
111 — A three tines the price that will IHR {A '-I
LI t% g give such continuous Ink* tj 1 J
f| My pleasure and service. M -Lg
i *S» if
1 c" I
it
i cw i=- ®
it a s
m -s a
in s, i
Ifl S" lit
I - 3 ° i
1 V 1
Letter to C. M. Thomas.
Emporium, Pa.
Pear Sir: Thomas J. Bannon, drug
gist, Westerly, R. 1., says:
Westerly painters expect a gallon of
paint to cover 19 sets of blinds; Devoe
covers 25; there is no such thing as
rubbing tliis out.
(The usual reckoning is for a gallon
to cover l<i. We suspect the Westerly
people ilnn't wear their paint till it gets
very shabby.)
Devoe covers wore; of course, we know
that; we know why too; it's all paint
and full-measure.
Yours truly
F. W. DKVOK t Co. |
P. 8. Murry and Coppersmith sell
our paint. 21.
Selfishness is the heart of sin.
A disordered stomach may cause no
end ot trouble. Whin the stomach fails
to perform its functions the bowels be
come deranged, the liver and kidneys con
gested, causing numerours diseases, the
most fatal of which are painless and
therefore the more to be dreaded. The
important thing is to restore the stomach
and liver to a healthy condition, and for
this purpose no better preparation can be
used than Chamberlain's Stomach and
Liver Tablets. For sale by L. Taggart.
The fussy are never effective.
Hesuit of a Railroad Accident.
Wm. L. Maynard, of Onterville, Pa.,
for 20 years suffered a great deal of pain
in the side and over the hips, caused by
being crushed between the cars. After
doing a little work he would always pass
gravel. Five years ago he used three
bottles of Thompson's Barosma, Kidney
and Liver Cure aud was completely cured,
having had no return of the disease
since. For sale by R C. Dodson.
!Adam, j
Meldrum & I
Anderson Co. <
iHUPFALO.N. V. }
396-408 Main Street, 3
A Most i
I Extraordinary )
jßug |
Sale 1
J I_| ERE IS A BARGAIN! j
) * * A leading mill decid- \
% ed to discontinue the maun- \
t facture of wool rugs and *
I > offered us their entire pro- e
j s duct at less than half manu- )
: £ facturer's sale price. These }
i r rugs are guaranteed all \
: } wool, fast colors and to \
| \ wear equal to any $25 rug t
1 sin the market. They come \
1 1 in sizes 7 feet 6 inches, by s
( 10 feet 6 inches, 9 feet by
i { to feet 6 inches, 9 feet by 9 )
| ( feet and 6 by 9 feet. }
|J A 9x12 |
ALL WOOL RUG |
> Guaranteed Fast Colors
112 Each a copy of an Oriental j
) design, 500 in the lot, 3
5 24 different designs—your 3
1 > choice, I
| $12.00 j
; > Adam. j
1 Meldrum &c t
Anderson Co. )
Lrin Vmerlcar Block, J
BUFFALO, N. Y. )
I 3=7 R. SEGER &ISON.
AAjßk Outfitters to Particular People.
The Young Man
MHTLCMCH ( He ba. long ago solved
,T & 0 J tf the problem of how to
L ~ SCHLwSS BROS L, CO / JP, dress in up-to-date apparel
FINE CLOTHES MAKERSJ,'^ a t a minimum cost by com
"""" ing here and buying a
Schloss-Made Suit.
They're ready the moment they're needed—They're fashionable,
serviceable, and fit with the graceful swagger that a young man
likes, and best of all, they are not costly.
The illustration shows two of the snappiest Spring Styles. They
are especially designed for young men or ultra tastes and particu
larly those who want to be up-to-the-minute in style. The price
range
112 T AKTS $9.00 to $llOO
Cooper & Co.'s Utica Clothing $5.00 to $lO 50.
"Drop in and let us talk it over."
R. SEGER & SON,
OUTFITTERS TO PARTICULAR PEOPLE, EMPORIUM, PA.
' GRAND '
EASTER
OPENIN6
\\/E have planned for several months
to make a grand display and choose
the Easter-time for this exhibition. Our
enormous stock compel Is us to have
more room to properly show same. We
now occupy the entire "OLMSTED
BLO-K" and have the largest floor 1
space of any store in the county.
We respectfully invite the public to I
visit our store and inspect the different I
departments. I
gj 1 B
♦ 1 We entered this business with de- H « I g
g termination, energy and pluck and with 9
I ' N the help of the generous patronage of 1
H|i i H B
g the public, who appreciate honest and jg g
If fair dealing, we have succeeded far be- 9 .
8 J/ ii I vend our expectations. We are now in i J [I |
B v v 1 ' , |y iJ
n I 1 I H a position to buy in larger quantities and g
■ therefore cheaper.
Our prices are marked in plain fig- B
gj ures and are the very lowest that up-to-
S date furniture, made by skilled labor can I
I be sold for. 11l
We thank you all and hope to merit jl
J your future confidence and patronage.
| I Emporium Flint d| 1 j
The Best Printingdone here
Why not get the best?