Business CnrdH. awT a ATTORNEY-AT-LAW, Emporium, Pa. A bnslnessrelatingto estate,collections,real ••tates. Of phan'a Court and generallaw businesj will receive prompt attention. 42-ly. J. Q, JOHNSON. J. P. MCNARNBT JOHNSON b McNARNEY, ATTORNEYS-AT-LAW EMPORIUM, PA. Will give prompt attention to all businesses' wasted to them. l?-ly. MIOHAELBRENNAN, ATTORNEY-AT-LAW Collections promptly attended to. Real estate -a i t pension claim agent, 85-ly. Emporium, Fa. NIO 11 AS WADDINGTON, Emporium, Pa., CONTRACTOR FOR MASONRY AND STONE-CUTTING. All orders in my lipe promptly executed. All ►kindsof building and cut-stone, supp ed at low prices. Agent for pr grauitemonuments. Lettering neatly done. AMERICAN HOUBE, East Emporium, Pa..' JOHN 1.. JOHNSON, Fro*)'* Having resumed proprietorship of this old and well established House I invite ino patronage ol the public. House aewly furnished and thor •■sughly renovated. 481y F. D. LEKT. ATTORNEY-AT-LAW and INSURANCE AQ'T. EMPORIUM, PA TL USD OWNRRS AND OTHKRB IN CAHBBON ANI ADJOINING COUNTIES. I have numn om calls for hemlock and hard w>od timber lands.also stumpagefto., anrtpartlei desiring either buy or aejl well to < all on me. F. D. LEET. THE NOVELTY RESTAURANT, (Opposite Post Office,) Emporium, Fa. WILLIAM MCDONALD, Proprietor. I take pleasure in informing the public that; have purchased the old ana popular Noveltj Restaurant, located on Fouith street. It will b< Toy endeavor to serve the public in a mnnnei ibst shall meet with their approbation. Give mc a call. Meals and luncheon served at all hours u027-lyr WM. McDONALD. MAY GOUI.D, TKACBER OP PIANO, HARMONY AND THEORY Also dealer in all the Popular sheet Muuc, Emporium, Pa. Scholarstaught eitner at my home on Sixth Itreet or at the homes of the pupils. Outoftowr scholars will be given dates at my rooms In thli place. y. C RIECK, D. D. 8., DENTIST.; Office over Taggart's Drug Store, Emporium, Pa aqgfc Gas and other local annesthetics ad for the painless extractlox •SPEClALTY:—Preservation of natural taetk, lv "iludln£ Crown and Bridge Work. NN Tin AMNPIMNRFIR JOIUII ■ PILES suppository 1 D. Matt. Tbotapfoa. Bupt. I Ors3«-i Schools, 6tst««Ti!lt, f<. C , vrl'.st: " I emn a*7 m they «*• sll you vj.alm for tbsn l»r. S M Dsvort, H Rsveo Back. w. T»., wrlUa " They fl*e »nir«r«al aatla- ■ fa.'tiou." Dr. 11. I> MuOiU, Ctarkaburf. Tcan.. wrltea: B " la a prsatlec «112 IS yaara, I hava foaa4 ao remedy to H equal youve." Paica, M Ca*Ta. Bainplee Free. Ball ■ >itr»IIIITI M*WTIN WUOV, LAWCASTXR. pa. | Sold la Eiuporlua by l>< aa4 &■ O Dsdaol Siodol Dyspepsia Cure Digests what you «at. POPULAR SCENIC ROUTE. Buffalo & Susquehanna Railroad Company. Official Condensed Time Table in Effect June 23, 1902. 1 Week Days. Dally Week Day*. Only j 9. M. I r. M.l P. M.IA.K. |A. M.I STATIONS. , A. M P. H.! ». V. P. M. r. If. (wl 610 11 10] 7 15 Lv Addison Ar 10 13 * 4.1 6 411 8 ill 11 41| 801 Elkland t» 41 411 SMI 646 11 46! 806 Osceola \ 836 406 555 555 11 55 822 KnoxviUe 0 2 POtDUlaf FANCY CAKES, I U l ICE CREAM, ... • - CONFECTIONERY Daily Delivery. All orders given promptand skillful attention. WHEN IN DOUBT, TRY They have stood the test of yea^ CTDnUO * * ana have cured thousand* ol &T V OlisUlvb lv 112 /fli ///v casel No rv °us Diieasei, such 112 ipi,2i V *t£_l Rl2i4l'l I They cleat the brain, strengthen \ circulation, make digestion \ ■*7>. a . , perfect, and Impart a healthy w " ol « being. All drains and losses are checked permanently. Unless patients 112f r °P erl 7 curco, their condition often worries them into Insanity, Consumption or Death. jMfinMgCK x ailed sealed. PHo |i per box; 6 boxes, with Iron-clad legal guarantee to cure or refund the money, $5.00. Seud for free book. Address, PfcAL MtDIOINS CO.. Clmltld. <*, Wi Mle bj a. O. Dodacn, Druggut, Emporium, Pa, TIME TABT.It No. V. COUDERSPORT &. PORT ALLEGANY R. R. Taking etl'ect Ma y 27tU„ IWII. KASTWARD. |lO iT TTTT 2 STATIONS. ; ; 1 ;P. 41. P. M.A. M. A. M. Port Allegany,.. Lv 315 1 705 11 34 Ooleman *8 23 .... .... *ll 41 Burtvtlle, *3 30 7 )0> 11 47 Roulette | 3 40 ..... 7 £SL 11 66 Knowltoa'a *3 43 .... 1"" *ll f>9 Mink, 3 59 7 35 12 05 Olmsted *4 05 *7 38, *l2 00 HuuimomU | OO ! oa 1... -. ,"12 13 j Ar. 4 20 A.M.; 7 *5 12 15 Cocdersport. jj ¥ | 6 lo! H 00! 100 North Coudersport, *6 15; °° ' "1 »B Frluk's 8 25 «6 10 »1 ?2 Colesburg, *S 40 "6 17! 1 20 Seven Bridges ! «6 4 V »6 21 j »1 S4 Raymonds s ! *7 00: .... *6 30 ISO Gold, 1 705 ' 636 > 1 41 New II eld, ; I 00 1 145 Newfleld Junction, ' 737 .... 645 180 Perkins i "7 40 *6 48; *1 53 Carpenter's, ! 710 ... . 00 *1 87 Urowell's ' 1 7 50 «B 53 *2 01 Ulysses, Ar.' : 800 TOS 21# A. M.: .l I I'. ». WBSTWARIN. ; 1 s7" 3 ' STATIONS. — 1 A. M. p. M. A. M. Ulysses ..Lv. 720 2 25 1 9 10 Crowell's, *7 27 -2 32 • 9 19 Carpenter's 00 »2 84 • 9 22! Perkins *7 32 »2 37 *9 26 .... NewfleldlJunction 737 242 932 Newfleld, '7 41 246 00 .... Gold, 7 41 2 49' 9 40 Raymond'* »7 49 2 51 * 947 Seven Bridges, 01 •:) 01,*10 02 Colesburg *H 04 3 09 *lO 10 Print's, »8 12 *3 17 *lO 21 North Coudersport j OO *3 26 "10 3": .. . !Ar H25 330 10 45 P.M.' Lv. 828 «00 120 .... Hammr.nds 00 °° 00 1 Olmsted *8 33 »8 05 *1 31 Mina ;8 37 «10 187 ...., Knowlton'i, 00 *8 171 °° ' Rcjlette, ! 847 621 1 61; Burtville, 854 628 201 , Coleman, I" *6 84 00 Port Allegany I» 0* 840 2 251 (•) Flag stations. (°°) Trains do not stop 41 Telegraph offlces. 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'j for points north and south, At B. & S. .Tunc tion with Buflalo & Susquehannaß. R. north for Wellsville, south for Galeton anrtAnsonia. At Port Allceauy with W. N. Y. & P. R. R., north for Buflalo, Oiean, Bradford and Smethport; south for Keating Summit, Austin, Emporium (.nd Penn'a K. K., points. B. A. McCLURF, Gen'lSupt. Coudersport, Pa. Cheap S 5 J. F. PARSONS' ? Kodol Dyspepsia Cwra Digests what you est. Foley's Kidney Cure makes kidneys end bladder right. 8A NN E R 8A LVE the most healing salv* In the worlo men to work hunting for the bodies, but as yet none has been found. Little Fails is one of the most dreaded places 011 the Chippewa river for driv ers, yet this is the first serious acci dent that has ever occurred there. TALKED TO TEACHERS. President Roosevelt Addresses the Convention of Schoolmasters at Asbury Park. Asbury Park, N. J., .htly 8. —A crowd of 30,000 persons which turned out to welcome President Roosevelt made Friday, the closing day of the National Educational association's convention, the most impressive of all the great educational meetings. "The Duties of the Rich," was the subject matter of the speech which the president delivered to the edu cators. "After a certain point has been I reached," he said, "money making can j never again stand on the same plane with other and nobler forms of effort, j The roll of American worthiness num | bers, of rich men, only those who have used their riches aright, who have shown good conduct in acquiring it, and not merely lavish generosity in disposing of it." Although this was the day of the convention the president found 12,000 delegates, nearly all school J teachers, waiting to hear his first j speech, which was made in Ocean I Grove auditorium. At the close of this address the j president partly retraced his way | through the crowds who had welcom | ed him outside, but who had been un : able to secure admission to the audi torium, and at a previously chosen spot, where the overflow crowd had concentrated, he made a second speech in the open air to an even greater crowd than indoors. His sec ond audience was estimated at 20,000. The presidential train arrived at the depot at 2 o'clock and it took 35 minutes to make the trip from there through the welcoming people until the moment when the cheering sub sided and the president began to speak from the Ocean Grove audi torium platform. BUSINESS BULLETIN, | The Usual Midsummer Conditions of Quiet Prevail. New York, July 8. —R. G. Dun & Co.'s Weekly Review of Trade says: Customary quiet commercial condi tions at midsummer were augmented by the interruption of a holiday, ex cept that warm weather gave impetus to the distribution of seasonable wear ing apparel, sporting goods and outing supplies. In wholesale and jobbing circles an unusually brisk duplicate order business testifies to the freedom p rom accumulated stocks on the shelves of interior dealers, while there is no abatement of confidence in the future. Structural steel and all forms of railway equipment are the prominent features of the iron industry, but quiet conditions prevail at coke ovens and pig iron furnaces. Sensational soar ing of quotations for raw materials threatens the stability of the leading textile markets, although consump tion is not yet perceptibly diminished by rapidly rising price lists. Failures this week in the United States are 100 against 200 the corres ponding week last year, and in Canada 21, against 12 last year. Mutineers Escaped Their Pursuers. St. Petersburg, July B.—According to the latest reports the Kniaz I'otem kin lias escaped her pursuers and is still at large in the Black Sea with the torpedo boat destroyer Smetilivy and the Black Sea fleet hot on her trail. There is little doubt, that she is head ing for Poti or Batoum. Fourteen Miners Killed. Anderlues, Belgium, July 8. —Four- teen miners were killed and a "number injured by an explosion in a colliery here Friday. The explosion was caused by firedamp. AVENUE OF VICTORY. Berlin's Famous Boulevard to Be Re produced in the City of Washington. Berlin.—Here is a picture of Bedlin'a famous marble Sieges allee (Avenue of Victory), which American cablegrams report is to serve as model for a statu ary lined avenue of American heroes in Washington—to be erected through the munificence of the lately deceased Chicago millionaire lumberman, Ben jamin F. Furguson. The Sieges allee, which is one of Berlin's great show sights, is a personal gift to the city from Kaiser Wiihelm, and represents his own artistic idea. II bisects the beautiful Thiergarten park at the north end, stretching for a quarter of a mile from the giant Column of Victory in Koenigs plat/, to the inter section of Bellevue allee and Thier "SIKGES ALLEE" IX BERLIN. (Famous Avenue to Be Reproduced In Washington.) garten sira.sse. It is adorned on wither side with marble statutes of Prussian rulers, 32 groups in all, beginning with the earliest Markgrafs and continuing up to the time of the present em peror's grandfather, Kaiser Wiihelm the Great. Behind the figure of each ruler, which is considerably more than life size in glittering white marble, is a semi-circular bench bearing at either end busts of two eminent contem poraries. Beside Kaiser Wiihelm Der Grosse, for instance, are the busts of Moltke and Bismarck. It is said tha present emperor has reserved a space in the allee for his own statue, which, he hopes, will be erected by grateful posterity. The Sieges allee, besides constitut ing a magnificent selection of modern German sculpture, is a splendid lesson in history and patriotism for young Germany. Almost any afternoon troops of school children may be seen tramping up and down the allee in charge of teachers, who explain the significant things about the reign of each ruler, and about the two great men worthy of being immortalized in marble alongside of him. The statue of Frederick the Great in the Sieges allee was the original of the bronze presented by the kaiser to the city of Washington a year ago. In spring and summer, when the beautiful foliage of the Thiergarten is in full bloom and blossom, the Sieges allee is a gorgeous sight. It is some times ntade fun of by the hypercritical Berliners as being too funeral in as pect, and as giving a cemetery look to the park, but the avenue will stand for all time as a monument to patriotism and artistic sense of the strenuous William 11. The Sieges allee represents a cost of $1,000,000, and was paid for from the private purse of the kaiser. BRITISH MUNICIPAL CLORY. A New $8,000,000 Building Is to House the London County Council. London.—The London county council has sanctioned the purchase of a site 'on the south bank of the rhames, op posite the houses of parliament, at a cost of §:3,000,000, on which to erecr a county hall at an additional cost of about $5,280,000. w!ih a river embank ment costing $220,000. There will be a frontage of 800 feet on the river and 1 j v'| i A » SavaT* • ,r DESIGN FOR LONDON'S NEW COUN TY COUNCIL HALL. it' the building is architecturally suc cessful it will form with St. Thomas' hospital and Lambeth palace, also on the south side, a magnificent group oi public buildings. The definite plans for the building are not yet completed, and the drawing is not intended as other than a sketch scheme. At present the site consists of some unsightly wharves at the southeast end of Westminster bridge, but it is proposed to house in a great county hall the counly council, whicn controls the local government of Lon don. with the exception of the square mile of the city which remains under the historic lord mayor at the Mansion House. Ail the administrative offices will be contained in the building, to gether with the council chamber. Told of the President. Representative Cushman relates that when President Roosevelt was in the state of Washington„last year, he had a most enthusiastic reception. At one of the gathering!/ an old frontiersman con fided to Mr. Cushman that Roosevelt was the greatest man he ever saw and the greatest man who ever visited the northwest. On being asked for the rea son of his judgment the man replied: "Why, Roosevelt is the only man I ever saw who looks worse thau his car toons," 1 Balcom & Lloyd. I fiJ k ill] ———————————————— [|J [jUL lia IS m I I I I fi ii Jjjj WE have the best stocked |jij general store in the county 1 and if you are looking for re liable goods at reasonable ;{j ip prices, we are ready to serve you with the best to be found. || Our reputation for trust- J worthy goods and fair dealing j |8 is too well known to sell any 111 j] but high grade goods. I ijj ry Our stock of Queensware and h! Chinaware is selected with Bj great care and we have some [1 of the most handsome dishes 1] ever shown in this section, «j ii both in imported and domestic p makes. We invite you to visit I us and look our goods over. !j p ii fi p i - 1 i i i 1 - a 1 Balcom Lloyd, j Ifrjr WEI "□ Ef ErltzilF n\ fadQfir [Hi ■ [HI gIE | look elsewhere ™N T D F F°A R C G T E S T i: KE jj |3O Bedroom Suits, solid <£OC |4O Sideboard, quartered ffOO $8 $ oak at J>ZO oak, SOU Q oak at 4>ZI oak J>zo □ $25 Bedroom Suits, solid S2O $22 Sideboard, quartered ..sl6 % U, A large line of Dressers from Chifflonlers of all kinds and W $8 up. prices. W $ A large and elegant line of Tufted and Drop-head 8? ft Couches. Beauties and at bargain prices. M The finest line of Sewing Machines on the market, J3L j*T the "Domestic" and "Eldredge". All drop heads and r? * warranted. n A fine line of Dishes, common grade and China, in sets and by the piece. v M As I keep a full line of everything that goes to make up a good Furniture store, it is useless to enumerate them J Please call and see for yourself that I am telling you 1\? \l the tiuth, and if you don't buy, there is no harm done, as ix i it is no trouble to show goods. w I GEO. J. LaBAR. | W y 3