THE CAMERON COUNTY PRESS. vv ESTABLISHED BY C. B. GOULD, MARCH 1866. VOL. 39. lAt Opera House, Pt> - I Tuesday Evening, Feb. 28th, 1905. I Nixon & Zimmerman'Opera Company Their Elaborate Production of Willard Spencer's Greatest Success. H Miss BobWhitel FHANXC DESIION, MAE PHELPS AND J. LEE MCCLUBE, Comedians and Primadonna, Miss Bob White. j FULL OF SPARKLING CATCHY MUSID I AN OPERA WITHOUT A VULGARISM A Sumptuous Production with a Magnificent and Entire Scenic jg H Envioronment and Augmented Orchestra. EVERY PRISM REFLECTS ITS BRILLIANCY K A Gem Musically— A Picture Scenically y 60 P E G P L E 80 ■ INCLUDING THE FAVORITE XT' 1 A I LITTLE COMEDIAN * F K DCS!! OA And the Best Drilled, Sweeten: Voiced and Handsomest Chorus [| B 'Vi i' Assembled. Embracing all the Elements that Please. Four years gj fy >f record breaking success, »• | Prices: S2.GO, $1.50 and Si.OO. NOW ON SALE. M P. &E. Mail Train East will stop at Cameron, Sterling Run, |j H Driftwood and Sinnamahoning. Churning Song from Miss Hob White. Scottish Reformation. Tne "Story of tho Scottish Reforma tion'' or "John Knox vs Mary Stuart" will be given in the Opera IFouso, March 2 and 3, under the auspices of the First Presbyterian church. About eighty of the best local elocu- 1 tionary and musical talent will a:-:sist in the rendition, and in beautiful cos- ' tumea of the times will impersonate demure Puritan men, Scottish Sold j iers, Glasgow University students, and the different classes of Scotland. Miss Rose Ritchie will impersonate i the beautiful Mary, Queen ofScotsand 1 Rev. McCaslin will impersonate the I sturdy reformer, John Knox. Mrs. Monroe, the originator of this! entertainment, will be present and will correct the dramatized portions with a fine illustrated lecture. Diagram for reserved seats will be open on and after Monday, Feb. 27th. $25.00 Reward. Whereas, some person or persons, one week ago, poisoned my bird dog. I will give the above reward to any person, or persons, who will give me public or private information that will lead to the conviction of such party or parties. FRED JULIAN. Full account of the election in this county on 4th page. Colonial Dress Social. The Colonial Dress Social given in the public reading rooms Tuesday j night under the auspices of the Metho- j dint ladies was one of the most delight j ful social functions oi' the season. 1 The nearly two hundred in attendance i entered heartily into the spirit of the j occasion, thoroughly enjoying every feature provided by tho ladies for the i I pleasure of their guests. A soprano ' , solo by Miss Grace Lloyd, piano selec j Lions by Mr. Ericsson and Mrs. Trotter j together with music by the Sunday school orchestra, were a source of much | pleasure while the old fashioned spell- I ing bee gave no end of amusement, i Tho refreshments were dainty and tasteful, while the decorations, con sisting of flags and hunting were bright and pleasing. Many of the ladies were in Colonial dress and needless to say looked quaint and charming. All voted the occasion a decided success Chicken Supper. The young ladies of the M. E. con gregation at West Creek, are arrang ing for a chicken supper at the home of Miss Perna Gackill, Saturday even ing, March 4. Remember the date and pi tee, and when coated at their table, these ladies will remember you Subscribe for the PRESS; only $1.50 a year in advance. ' J "Liberty and Union, One and Inseparable." —WKßSTKß. EMPORIUM, PA., THURSDAY, FEBRUARY 23, 1905. The Observer. The coming John Knox entertain ment will be full of interest to those familiar with Scottish history, and will no doubt contain much that is instruc tive Whether or not the estimate of Knox that will be given in the enter tainment will coincide with that held by the Observer remains to be seen. Perhaps Knox will be represented as an unqualified hero, as a prophet of all thafris wise and righteous, and Mary Stuart as the embodiment of all that is evil. Certainly of all the dramatic juxtapositions in history, few have been more striking than the interview between the queen and the reformer. Matchless beauty was confronted with adamantine strength; a queen accus tomed to receive the adultation and homage of admiring attendants found herself face to face with a man who despised women as weak, trail, impat ient, feeble and foolish, and who had just blown his trumpet blast against "the monstrous regimen" of women; the daughter of the Guises and the dis ciple of Catharine de Medicis, Mary Stuart was pitted against the hard headed, aggressive, unruly, demo-theo cratic spirit of Scotland as embodied in Knox. * * * John Knox was certainly a man of heroic force and courage, and his in infiuence has been stamped upon the character and life of Scotland more deeply perhaps than that of any other man. Yet it is an error to regard him as an unqualified hero, as an embodi ment of pure wisdom and unalloyed righteousness. He possessed some of the characteristic faults of his age and of his race. lie was intolerant and self-willed, full of crotchets and hob bies. Much of the moral grandeur of his celebrated interview with Mary- Stuart vanishes when we recall that his denunciations were directed against her private freedom of worship, and against amusements, dramatic enter tainments, for instance, which in them selves are innocent. Knox never : treated the queen with fairness or just ! consideration. Ilia attitude towards ] her was similar to that of the old I Scotch minister to one of his elders j with whom he had a quarrel. "One of us," he said, "must give in, and I can not.' 1 The Observer cannot help sus-j peeting that Knox's conscience had in it an element answering to the defini tion; "conscience is something with in that says, ) won't." * * * As tor Mary Stuart, her character and career have been summed up-by Lamartine in a paragraph of consum mate skill and beauty: "If another Homer were to arise, and if the poet were to seek another Helen for the subject of a modern epic of war, religion, and love, he would beyond all find her in Mary Stuart, the most beautiful, the weakest, the most attractive and most attracted of women, raising around her by her ir resistible fascinations, a wirlwind of love, ambition, and jealousy, in w hich her lovers became, each i M his turn, the motive, the instrument, and the victim of a crime, leaving, like the Grpek Helen, the arms of a murdered husband for those of his murderer; 112 uv. ing seeds of internecine, religious, and foreign war at every step, and el - ing by a saintly death the life of a Clytemnestra leaving behi id her indis tinct memories exaggerated equally by Protestant and Catholic parties, the former interested in condemning tier for all, the latter in absolving her from all, as if the same factions who had fought for her during her life had re solved to continue the combat after her death!" Deadheads Work Strong Down South. Charles E. Thropp, the advance rep resentative of Nixon & Zimmerman's production of "Miss Bob White," the most popular of the comic operas on the road to-day, tells a story of how I t he "deadhead" or the worker of passes has reached the limit in one of the j small towns in Alabama, where the 1 show played recently. Mr. Thropp ! was on his way to the train, when he I was accosted by a stranger, who had evidently been put ••wise" to the fact that he was ahead of the "big show" j that was coming, and stopping hirn | said: "Say, are you the agent of this I "Bob White" troup that's comin;' j here," to which Thropp replied, "Yes I sir, and what can I do for you? ' "Well, I I'd like to have tour passos for my | family togo see that show." "What! j four passes. My gracious you have I your nerve with you. My dear, good j man I don't seo any reason why I ! should give y the standard of the other departments and will include among others Mai Phelps, Alice Craft Benson, Zellah Har Arnie Iladdon, Connie Mac. Georgia Campbell, Susie Talmage, Frank Deshon, James L. McClure, Joseph Leighton, 11. C. Saylor, Raymond Tymon, Rye V. £CY ~~ Melshaw, Donald Archer, and A. (J. Dempster and a chorus of 10. The story of "MiS3 Bob White" revolves around an election bet made by two young millionaires and the loss of which compels them to masquerade as tramps for two months and to earn their own living during that time by their wits. The title comes from a non de plume assumed by the sweet heart of one of the young men who follows them to enjoy their odd plight. It is full of sparkling melodies in Mr. Spensor's best vein and the comedy situations are intensely funny. In deed it as if everyone already wants to see "Miss Bob White" if one may judge from the demand for seats Prices, §2.00, $1.50 and $1.00; Gallery, for boys and girls only, 50c. The de mand for seats continues to come from Austin, Driftwood and other towns. Don't wait until last days before secur ing your seats. jCall or write to 11. S. Lloyd, Emporium, Pa., enclosing the price of seats you desire. He will make the best selections pos sible, Down-county patrons must re member that Erie Mail train going east will stop at all stations. Doors open at 7:00, curtain rises at 8:00 o'clock, xharp, r her. by giving ample time for out-of'-towr people to see the play and return home. This being the first opportunity Cameron county has had to witness a first class city attrac tion (induced to come here by a com mittee of Emporium gentlemen, who personally made the guarantee) it is hoped Emporium and surround ing towns will avail themselves of this treat. As funny a pair of comedians as tread the boards are Frank Deshon, the Billy van Million, and Jim Mc- Clure, the Artie tre Billion, of Nixon & Zimmerman's "Miss Bob White" Opera Company, which will bo seen here Feb. 28th. The former is a mite of a mortal, the latter is a scissors-like affair, over six feet in growth. Both of these comedians will remain with "Miss Bob White" during its tour next ' season, and will accompany the Spen- ! ser opera to London in May, 1906. "Miss Bob White" is one of the few j American vehicles selected by George Edwards for a London production dur. ing his recent American visit. The bowling team from Emporium visited this place Wednesday night, an elegant bauquet was served the visiting team at the Connolly House after the contest.—Port Allegany Argus. | TERMS: $2.00— 51.50 IN ADVANCE. WEATHER REPORT'| (Forecastby T. B.Lloyd.} FRIDAY, Fair. SATURDAY Fair. SUNDAY. Fair. DEATH'S DOINGS. EMERY. MRS. JENNIE L. EMERY, wife of Joseph L. Emery, deceased, died at the family home Westporr, Pa.. Satur day, Feb. 18th, 1005, aged 54 years, one month and 11 days. Deceased has been in poor health for some time yet her death came unexpected. She leaves eight ehildreu, viz: Rue! F Boston, Mass.; Silas W , Galeton, Pa."' Jos. 11., New York City, S. Peari' Reginald A, Ruby H., Samuel J.' r uella A., at home. She is also bur vived by four sisters and two brothers viz: Mrs. J. L. Johnston, Grant Pa.' Mrs. J. p. Derr, Renovo, Pa ; Mrs. ,1. O.Lewis, Emporium; Mrs. A. P. Hans] com, Lock Haven; Mr. E B. Freeman Emporium and 11. B. Freeman, Philli pines, P. I. The tuneral, which was largely at tended, was held from the family resi dence Westporr, last Tuesdav, the in terment being made in 'Highland Cemetery, Lock Haven. 1 ho deceased will be pleasantly re membered by our nitizens as Jennie Freeman, daughter of Benj VV. i- ree man, deceased. She was jjreatlv re spected by a)! who knew her. Mrs. Freeman was, as a girl, exceptit nnlly bright and as handsome as a picture, full of life and happiness. Many of her girl friends stii! remaining here, will be pained to learn of her death. Mra. Freeman was a devout member of M. E. Church. AVERY. RODNEY N. AVERY, a former resi dent of this place, died at his home at North Tonawandn, N. Y., February 8; fuueral at (he family residence, inter ment at Hales Eddy. Star Course Closer. With the Ariel Ladies Quartet of Boston the Star Course, season of 1004- 1905, came to a close last Friday even ing. Despite the prevalence of a driv ing snow storm, the attendance was almost of the regulation size and those who ventured forth felt amply repaid for having done so The Concert was bright and pleasing, thoroughly refill-* ed and artistic and was a worthy and fitting close to the series thus given. Collectively and individually the members of the Quartet were strong. Miss Machenzie is a reader of no mean ability. She is not an elocutionist of the stereotyped order, but. posses a distinct individual ity of style, a rare charm and grace of manner; a voice deeply musical and under GXcellentcont.ro!. The selection from Ben Hur, in which (he vocal re frain, '*Glorv to God in the Highest," was furnished by Hie other members in an adjoining room, produced a thrilling effect. The emotive plastique-'. in Grecian costumes, por traying the various emotions, \\ ire artistically done. Miss Monoghui- ;s the possessor of a soprano voieo of bird like clearness and purit ■, while the ease and naturalness with which she sings, imnarls :m ad.led ch.i .n to her work. The violin Belcotioi of Miss Leavitt were not the least arti-.'-ic feature, while Miss Sampson, the ti'st Contralto, sang very charmingly Re gret was manifest on all side.- that ihc last number had been reached and -c desire for the continuance of the Course freely expressed. It is not. im probable, if adequate patronage is given, that this will bo done The management desires to thank all patrons for the encouragement given, which has made possible the success achieved. Wm. Hackenberg Speaks. Editor I'rens:— Allow me, through yor.r paper, to express my very many thanks to tt osr of my friends, belonging to both the Democratic and Republican parties, who worked and voted for my e':oct'i a as Constable and Collector. I feel proud to have such friends and proud of the good showing they made for me, after some of the leaders of my own party, and even ome of the busi ness firms, op. osed my election. Why? Because they supposed in uy defeat they would defeat one of the gieatcst industries this town and county ever had, or ever will have, I venture to say distributes nu.re money each mom h I h;n all the other industrii combined I understand §14,000 was distributed last month. Now, why this opposition to this great business industry? Simply, as ion derstand the ofliers of our Borough promised to exonerate this plant ft .m a portion of Borough and School taxes for a term of ten \ ears. I ask the vot ers to look over the minutes of the Borough Council proceedings and sec who it was that made the motion U> ex empt and who seconded and voted for it. Now, I ask are (he Councilinens' promises sacred or are they to be broken as soon as made, or as soon as the man to whom the pledge was given incurs the displeasure of the Tax Col lector. WM. HACKENBERQ. February 22, 1905. The officials of the Pennsylvania Railroad Company have notified the politicial leaders that no free passes will be issued for the inauguration ceremouies at Washington on March 4th. All persons desiring togo to Washington will be treated alike and one low excursion rate will be given to all the same. For those over a hundred miles from Washington the fare will be just half the regular price or one fare for the round trip ticket' plus 25 cents. NO. 1.