Business Cards. iTwi QREEN, 3=l ATTORNEY-AT-LAW, Emporium, Pa. A bnslnesarelating to estate,collection*. Mtatoa, Orphan's Court and gentrallaw bualnOM •dllrecalve prompt attention. 42-17. J. 0. Jobnios. J. P. MoNarnbt OHNBON & McNARNET, ATTORNEYS-AT-LAW Emporium, Pa. will prompt attention to all business ea' fitted to them. 16-ly. tiioa AI lb R E NN a N , ATTORNEY-AT-LAW OolUctions promptly attended to. Real estati and pension claim agent, IS-ly. Emporium, Pa. anouAS WADDINGTON, Emporium, Pa., CONTRACTOR FOR MASONRY AND BTONE-CUTTING. AD orders in my line promptly executed. All AUdlof building and cut-stone, supp 'ed at low Srßet A|ent for tuarblf pr granite monument* neatly done. i&ka<XAN HOUSE, East Emporium Pa.." JOHN L. JOHNSON, Prop"*, ■ivlsi feenmcd proprietorship of this old and ertabllstied House I Invite the patronage ol pv>b\lo. House newly furnished and thor' Hiyhiy renovated. 4kly and INSURANCE AQT. EMPORIUM, PA iR» LAVS OWWBX AMD OTHBRS IN CAMUIOH A» Adjoining Coontiks. I kav* numerous calls for hemlock and hard* v&od timber lauds,also stumpagPitc., and partial jenrint either to buy or aoll do well to call me. K. D. LEET. rHK NOVELTY RESTAURANT, (Opposite Post Office,) Emporium, Pa. William McDonald, Proprietor. I lake pleasure in Informing the public that) Sarp purchased the old ana popular Novelty mcetaurant. looated on Fourth street. It will b< my endeavor to serve the public In a mannei that shall meet with their approbation. Give m< • call. MeaU ana lcheon served at all houra n027-lyr W m McDONALD. ST. CHARLES HOi'EL, THOS. J. LYSETT, Pbopbibtoi Near Buffalo Depot. Emporium, Pa. This new and commodious hotel is now opened for the accommodation of the publio. Newmal Itaappolntmenta, every attention will be pal' te the guests patronising this hotel. 27-17-ly MAY GOULD, TiioHia or PIANO, HARMONY AND THEORY Aleo dealer in all the Popular tiheet Muuc, Emporium. Pa. Scholars taught eitner at my home on Sixth •treet or at the homes of the pupils. Out oftowE soholara will bo given dates at my roomilutbli place. ■9. O. RIECK. D. D. S„ DENTIST.; Office over Taggart's Drug Store, Emporium, Pa ' Gas and other local anaesthetics ad "KIEf,." 5 ministered for the paiulesa extractloi veeth. SPECIALTY: —Preservatioa of natural teeth, U oloding Crown and Bridgs Work. NEW CAMERONHOUSE, Cameron. Pa., Opposite I'. & E. Depot, HARRY McGEE. Proprietor. Having taken possession of this house and thoroughly remodeled and enlarged the building by erecting an addition of eighteen rooms, I am well prepared to meet the demands of the public. Guests conveyed to any part of the county. Good flshiug and hunting in the immediate vicinity. Kodol Dyspepsia Cure Digests what you <>at. POPULAR SCENIC ROUTE. Buffalo & Susquehanna Railroad Company. Official Condensed Time Table in Effect June 23, 1902. -Sun day Week Days. Bail* Week Days. •Opjy j I*. M. j P.M. P.M. A.M. A.M.I STATIONS. ( A.M.' P. M.j *. M.l P.M.; ». If, a loi 8 10! 11 loj 7 15Lv Addison Ar 10~13 4 43i 841 I 841 11 41 8 0l! Elk land 941 4 111 848 846 U46 8 OS' Osceola 930 4 06! 855 i 6 55; 11 65 822 Knoxville #26 386 611 I 611 12 11 840 Westfield 813 3 431 847 ; 647 12 47 ft 25 Gaines Junction 838 3 06 ( 7007 600 00 100 Ar. | Galeton,. }jj;j 8232 53 8 35; T4O 540 P.M. P.M. 10 58 Ar Cross Fork Junction Lv 738 209 4 23' 645 2 10; 11 00 Lv. Cross Fork Junction Ar.j 'is 200 355 655 3 00. 11 50 Ar. Cross Fork, Pa. Lv.j 615 100 305 BMI 624 p. M. A. M. 11 39 Ar Wharton Lv.j 853 1 26, 8 10, 8051140 Lv Wharton Ar 10 63 j 3 00; A.M. 858 100 Ar Slnnamahonlng Lvi 955 I 140 145 643 800 11 58 Lv Austin Ar 635 105 950 800 71 0 845 1 12 25 Ar Keating Summit.. Lv 12 40i 9 10: 730 112. M.j P. M. A. M. !A. M P. M.l A. M., P. M.j A. M. P. M. j P. M. A. M.| 820 935 Lv V. An J°"!» Ar *9 21 700 835 , 949 a 'Ji 1 « < e " 9 0-5 6 44i 839 953 South Gaines, 90l 640 842 9 55' Gaines Junction g 59 fi 3^ 855 10 09 Ar Galeton L>' 8 45! 6 25 I I : i | P. M. A. M. A. M. P. M.l F.MJ A. M P.M. 1 05, 630 Lv 2, a, S toB Ar 10 10 4 55: 124 647 y /V * a ••••• I 951 4 39! 150 713 Newfleld Junction 927 415 2 1)6 730 West Bingham 909 401, 218 7 41; Genesee ; g sg 3 52 2 24, 746 V* iu V 853 3 47! 2 46| 8 06, ..Wellgville Lv g39 3 30 , . I j_ 'A. M.l P. M.l CONNECTIONS. At Keating Summit with B. 81 A. V. Div. of Pennsylvania R. R. At Ansonia with N.Y.C.& H R. R. for all points north and south. At Newfield Junction with C. & P. A. Ry., Union Station. At Genesee with N. Y & Pa., Ry. Union Station. At Addison with Erie R. R., Union Station. At Wellsvilie with Erie R. R. for points east and west. At Sinnamahoning with P. R. R.—P. &E. Div. n. H. GARDINER, Oen'l Pass'r Agt. Buffalo, N.Y.| W. C. PARK. Gen'l Supt., Galeton, P*. M. J. MCMAHON, Div. Pass Ag't.,Galeton,Pa. G.SCHMIDT'S,^ ■ ■ HEADQUARTER! FOR FRESH BREAD, J popular -r --1 jß&Kery, « CONFECTIONERY Daily Delivery. Allordersgivcnpromptand skillful attention. WHEN IN DOUBT, TRY They have stood the te.t of yea, VTDnMP < and hav« cured thousands cl IB I OinUßu I W 112 a ock V/°f Nervous Diseases, such IV Ok Debllity^uzineti.Sleeples!' ff W IP I 111 V and Varicocele, Atrophy. &c. v. Jtbl fillflin ' fMfi 1,. 11 a , m'^ TW " rJ ' r' \ V-«/ lhe circulation, make digestion rjt i Xfe J . .. .... perfect, and impart a healthy wA * OT , w »°'« All drains and losses are checked permanently. Unless patients are properly cured, their condition often worries them into Insanity, Consumption or Death. WSSrv*il.T Mailed sealed. •; *» c ® 112 * per boa; 6 boxes, with iron-clad legal guarantee to cure or refund the ~WSt mouey. » 5 00. Scud tor bee book. Addreii, PEAL MEDICINE CO.. Cl«««lud. 0. For sale by R. O. Dodsrn, Druggist, Eiuporinat, Pa, TIMETABLE No. V. COUDERSPORT & PORT ALLEGANY R. R. Taking effect Ma y 27th. 1801. KASTWARD. ~| 10 8 VT 6 I 2 STATIONS. j i 1 P. M. P. M A. M. A. M. Port Allegany,.. Lv. :)1115 1 7 Oft 11 38 Coleman, *3 21 1 150 » "11 41 Hurtville »:i 30 7 IB i 11 47 Roulette, 3 40 j 7 251 11 55 Knowlton's *3 45 .... <*> \ *ll 59 Mina, 3 59 ! 7 85 12 05 Olmsted *4 05 *7 38 *l2 09 Hammonds 00 i 00 i *l2 13 Coudersnort { Ar 420 a. m. 7 4.5 12 15 uouuersport. Ly | fl , fl 800 j QO North Coudersport, *6 15 .... 00 i*l i>s Frink's 1 6 2V *6 10 »1 Colesburg, 1..... *6 40 *6 17 120 Seven Bridges I i*B 45: *6 21 *1 lA Ravmonds's I!* 7 00 ..... •6 30! 1 36 Gold. 705 636 141 Newtield .....; j 00 ■ 1 ! 1 45 Newtield Junction, 737 645 150 Perkin9 ..... *7 40 *6 18 *1 53 Carpenter's 746 I °° *1 57 Crowell's 7 50 •« 53 *2 01 Ulysses Ar.'.... 8 05, '7 05 210 | I A.M.I I I P. M. WESTWARD. | I 5 7 3 STATIONS. I A.M. P. M. A. M Ulysses Lv. 720 225 910 Crowell's, ,»7 27 *2 32 • 9 19 Carpenter's, 00 l«2 34 •9 22 ..... Perkins, *7 3? »2 37 • 9 26 NewfieldlJunction I 737 2 42: 932 ..... Newtield, *7 41 246 °° I ..... Gold, ! 744 249 9 10 Raymond's *7 49 -2 54 * 9 47 Seven Bridges, *8 01 *3 Of! *lO 02 . ...r Colesburg, *8 04 3 09 *lO 10 Frink's, »8 12 *3 17 *lO 20 ..... North Coudersport, 00 *3 26 *lO 35 .... !Ar. 8 25 3 30 10 45 : p. m. Lv. 828 600 120 Hammonds, !°° °° 00 Olmsted, *8 S3 *8 05 *1 31 Mina I 837 61 0, 187 Knowlton's, 00 *6 17! 00 i Rc jlette 847 621 151 Burtvilie 854 628 201 Coleman 00 ]*6 8 1 00 j Poit Allegany, If 08 640 2 251 (*) Flag stations. (°°) Trains do not stop ♦ I Telegraph offices. Train Nos. 3 and 10 will carry passengers. Tains 8 and 10 do. Trains run on Eastern Standard Time. Connections—At Ulysses with Fall Brook R'y for points north and south. At B. & S. Junc tion with Buffalo & Susquehannaß. R. north for Weilsville, south for Galeton and Atisonia. At Port Allegany with W. N. Y.A P. R. R., north for Buffalo, Olean, Bradford and Hmethport; south for Keating Summit, Austin, Emporium and Penn'a R. R., points. B. A.McCLURF. Gen'lSupt. Coudersport, Pa. X The Place to Buy Cheap S ) J. F. PARSONS' ? Kodcl Dyspepsia Cure Digests what you eat. Foley's Kidney Cure makes kidneys and bladder right. BANNER SALVE mo«* salve in the world- CAMERON COUNTY PRESS, THURSDAY, DECEMBER 8, 1904. UNCLE SAM'S POSTAL SERVICE POSTOFFICES AT CLOSE OF FIS CAL YEAR NUMBER 71,131, RURAL FREE DELIVERY EXTENDED. : Nearly 1,600 Offices Were Burglarized —66 Postal Cars Were Wrecked —Deficiency in Revenue Ag gregates $8,779,492. Washington, Dec. 3. —Extension of | the rural free delivery service lias re i suited in an increase of 1,125 in tho j number of postoffices discontinued | j during the fiscal year ended June 30, j 1904, according to the annual report , of J. L. Bristow, fourth assistant post master general, made public yester day. During the year there were 2,549 j postoffices established and 5,557 dis | continued. There was a decrease of j 158 in the number of offices establish ! ed. The principal cause of the in | crease in discontinuances has been | the extension of the rural free deliv [ ery service. The total number of dis- | | continuances was 3,750 postoffices, with a saving in salaries of postmas | ters aggregating $171,121. At the close of the fiscal year there were 71,- 131 postoffices in the United States — 205 first class, 1,204 second class, 3,890 third class and 05,700 fourth class. An appropriation of $3,000,000 for the establishment of new routes will be asked by the department for the 1 fiscal year ending June 30, 1900. Of the needs for the service Mr. Bristow says: "There are now in operation 28,073 routes. It is estimated that 2,000 addi tional routes can bo established out of the appropriation now available, | making 30,073 which will be in opera i tion or ordered established by January 15, 1905. To maintain service on these routes from July 1, 1905, to June 30, 1900, will require $21,300,000. "If congress should make a sup plemental appropriation of $500,000 for the current fiscal year, as suggest ed, additional routes can be establish | ed, bringing the number in operation ! lime 30, 1905, up to approximately 32,- ; 500. In that event about $23,120,000 will be required to maintain the serv- | ice during the next fiscal year, making a total appropriation of $20,120,000 for ' the maintenance and installation of I the service for the next fiscal year." The report shows that during the j | year 1,593 postoffices were robbed: ; j there were Oo depredations on railway j j postoffices, star routes, rural free de- ! J livery routes and screen wagon serv- i ice. There were 940 robberies of | street and rural free delivery letter ! ! boxes. Sixty-six postal cars were j burned and wrecked, and 500 post offices were burned. There were 2,379 mail pouches lost, damaged or rifled. An increased deficiency of 92.53 per I cent, over the previous year is shown j jby the financial statement for the ! j postal service, incorporated in the an nual report of E. C. Madden, third as sistant postmaster general. The re port shows that the increase in ex penditure's is on account of the rural | free delivery service. Were it not for I this extraordinary expenditure the [ postal service now would be about self-sustaining. The total receipts ! from all sources for the fiscal year were $143,582,624 and the total ex- ! penditures $152,302,116, leaving a de- j ficiency of $8,779,492. Money taken from dead letters, for ! which no owneis could be found, and I that realized from the auction sale of unclaimed articles sccumulated in the j dead letter office aggregated $22,210. j Three Trainmen Killed. Columbus, Ind., Dec. 3.—While run ning 50 miles an hour, a northbound passenger train on the Pennsylvania road last night ran into a construction train two miles north of this city, in stantly killing three trainmen, fatally injuring one other and inflicting in juries upon a score of passengers. The dead: Samuel Crow, Jefferson ville, passenger engineer. Herman C. Jones, Columbus, brakeman. E. W. Achen bach, Indianapolis, fireman. The pas senger coaches did not leave the track and none of the passengers was badly injured. Fireman Achenbach's body was burned to a crisp in his engine. Mints' Output Largest on Record. Washington, Dec. 3. —The director of the mint, in his annual report, shows that the output of the mints at Philadelphia, San Francisco and New Orleans, which were in operation throughout the fiscal year, was the largest on record. It estimates the gold stock of the world in use as money on December 31, 1903, at ap proximately $5,600,000,000, of which about half is visible In banks and pub lic treasuries. The estimate for the stock of the United States at that time is $1,300,000,000, of which $859,- 000,000 was in the treasury and na tional banks. A Blaze on the Pike. St. Louis, Dec. 3.—Fire - i«*t night broke out in the attraction on the world's fair pike known as "Quo Vadls," and spread to the Japanese pa vilion abjoining. A first alarm brought out alj the fire fighting apparatus in the world's fair grounds, but it was soon seen that the firemen would not be able to cope with the flames and it was followed by a general alarm. The financial loss is not great. Panic Followed a Collision. New York, Dec. 3. —Eight hundred passengers on the ferryboat Paunpeck were thrown into a panic last evening and several were injured when tht' ferryboat was struck in midstream by a Hudson liver steamer, tho name of which has not yet been learned. Father and Son Were Sentenced. St. Louis, Dec. 3. —James N. Rice : and his son, J. N. Rice, jr., 17 years! | old, were yesterday sentenced in the j district court on counterfeiting | charges. Rice was given ten years in the penitentiary and his son three years in the reform school. THE CHADWICK AFFAIR. Friends Come to Her Aid and Banker Newton Will be Paid. New York, Dec. 3.—Mrs. Oassie L. Chad wick made another visit to tho financial district yesterday. On Thurs day she went through the Wall street section almost unobserved and scarce ly more than a dozen persons knew of j her presence in the street. Yesterday, however, her coming had been herald i ed and when she drove up to the build j ing in which the offices of the Central J Trust Co. and the attorneys whom she : visited Thursday are located, the ! street was thronged with a curious crowd. In a few moments the crowd ! had swollen to such proportions that half a dozen extra policemen were j called to preserve order and clear a passage way through the street. After waiting an hour or more for Mrs. Chadwick to reappear the crowd learned that, she had given them the slip by going over the roofs from the Central Trust Co. building to a build ing on Pine street. There she had made her way to William street and drove away while the crowd waited ; half a block away. At neither the 1 Central Trust Co. nor the office of the attorneys could anything regarding Mrs. Chadwick's visit be learned. | "Powerful aid lias saved the day for her." This statement was made Friday by George Ryall, of local counsel for Her | bert D. Newton, in discussing the set j tlernent of his client's claim against Mrs. Chadwick. Where Mrs. Chadwick obtained the aid Mr. Ryall did not state. Ryall also said: "Statements that Mrs. Chadwick is to pay only $78,000 of Mr. Newton's claim at this time are untrue. The person who came to Mrs. ! Chadwick's relief will pay to me in a few hours the full amount of the claim of $190,800, with a reasonable amount of interest besides. I will give that money to Mr. Newton and he will never know "who paid it to me. I can not reveal the identity of Mrs. Chad wick's friend." Cleveland, Dec. 3. —A petition in in voluntary bankruptcy was filed against Mrs. Chadwick in United States court Friday. The plaintiffs S are Jacques Krakaur, New York, deal -1 erin laces and embroidery, claiming a debt of $000; George Couch, Cleve -1 land, liveryman, claiming a debt of S3OO, and H. F. Potter, Cleveland, mer chant, claiming a debt of S2OO for mer chandise. The plaintiffs allege that the giving of a note to the Elyria bank by Mrs. Chadwick at the time she was so indebted to them was an act of in | solvency. Friday afternoon Referee Harold Remington appointed Nathan Loeser 1 receiver for all of Mrs. Chadwick's ( property on the application of tiie plaintiffs in the bankruptcy suit. TRADE BULLETIN. Holiday Goods are Moving Freely and There Is More Activity in Staple Lines. New York, Dec. 3. —R. G. Dun & | Co.'s Weekly Review of Trade says: Holiday goods are moving freely, ! and in staple lines there is more ac j tivity, even the products that are be tween seasons finding a fair market. I Packing and shipping departments j are increasing forces and traffic con ! gestion at several points indicates ! that the growth of business has over j taxed railway facilities. Earnings of ' all roads reporting for November show j an average gain of 7.1 per cent, over ! last year. Weather conditions have | favored jobbing and retai! distribution | of heavy wearing apparel, and also ac | celerated the marketing of new corn, ! but there is not sufficient moisture for i winter wheat or coke production. A record breaking yield of cotton is | bringing the price nearer the point at which normal consumption may be re sumed, although there is still much idle machinery at Fall River. Other manufacturing news is most gratify ing, especially regarding the leading lines. Structural work increases and car shops are crowded with orders, while many idle steel mills have re sumed. Commercial failures this week in the United States are 245, against 331 the corresponding week last year. Failures in Canada number 29, against 23 last year. Seeks a Queer Injunction. Chicago, Dec. 3. —Injunction to pre vent his wife from talking was asked Friday in the circuit court by Thomas P. Wood, a carpenter. In defending his own name from alleged scandal Wood declares he is also acting far the good of a Mrs. Margaret Watson. He fears, he says, that his wife will tell things about him to the members of secret societies to which they be long. He also seeks to stop oral ut terance of his wife in Newtonville, 0., and Muncle, Ind. In her "overheated imagination" Wood declares his wife "has conjured visionary and absurd scandals." Oldest American Actress Dies. Chicago, Dec. 3. —Mrs. George Gil bert, the oldest actress on the Ameri can stage, died at the Sherman house Friday, shortly after she had suffered a stroke of apoplexy. Mrs. .Gilbert is the star of the play "Granny," written for her by Clyde Fitch. The company was organized by Charles Frohman and was put before the public as a tribute to Mrs. Gilbert's long career on the stage. When she started to tour the country it was the intention to present the play in every city where she had played during her career and at the conclusion she was to retire. Coroner's Jury Exonerated Felton. New York, Dec. 3. —Stewart A. Fel ton, the gambler who shot Guy Roche, another gambler, in Broadway Thanksgiving evening, was exonerat ed yesterday by a coroner's jury which decided that he acted in self-defense. He was remanded back to the Tombs, however, as he is under ind.ctment on a charge of murder in the first degree. McClellan to be Renominated. New York, Dec. 3. —Tho declaration | was made yesterday by Charles F. | Murphy, leader of Tammany Hall, that | Mayor George B. McClellan would be | renominated for another term. & LOOK ELSPWHFRF BUT DONT forget THESE A h LUUI\ LLOLWnLnL PRICES AND FACTS AT J i l.\ MAUN; S3O Bedroom Suits, solid f4O Sideboard, quartered & S2B Bedroom Suits, solid Z I oak U & $25 Bedroom Suits, solid 112^ deboar<1 > quartered <£|o 4^ Q A large line of Dressers from Chiffloniers of all kinds and V. >-f $8 up. prices. $ A large and elegant line of Tufted and Drop-head Couches. Beauties and at bargain prices. Q, The finest line of Sewing Machines 011 the market, Jvl Kf the "Domestic" and "Eldredge". All drop heads and W ri warranted. A ■Jy A fine line of Dishes, common grade and China, in $ sets and by the piece. )>• §& As I keep a full line of everything that goes to make W up a good Furniture store, it is useless to enumerate them i" 1 Please call and see for yourself that I am telling you i*? the tiuth, and if you don't buy, there is no harm done, as $ it is no trouble to show goods. | GEO. J. LaBAR. | | Balcom & Lloyd. 112 Iprepared 1 f or I the Se&soti| || We have opened and are displaying a p choice line of . . jf I FANCY 1 SjDRY GOODS 1 |r B J] specially selected for the . . US I _ Simmer! I ® Season. I Jl g B i 01 We have gathered such articles as g [, combine elegance with jj jj and utility at Jj | Very Reasonable | I Prices ~ 1 | ___ ____ p | Balcom & Lloyd, j 3