Cameron County press. (Emporium, Cameron County, Pa.) 1866-1922, October 15, 1908, Image 8

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RSKI
•Baking Pjgf
Powder |pj|
Absolutely I
PURE
Insures delicious, health- I
ful food for every home, every day. u
The oiily baking powder made |
from Royal Grape Cream of Tartar— |
made from grapes. 1
Safeguards your food against alum and §
phosphateof lime —harsh mineral acids which I
are used in cheaply made powders.
■ I II
LOCAL DEPARTMENT,
PERSONAL GOSSIP.
Contribution* invited. That which you would
ike to nee in thin departmental lIM know by poi
al card or letter, personally.
Mrs. T. H. Norris and son Fay spent
the first of the week visiting at Buffalo.
Mrs. P. P. Rentz visited friends and
relatives at Williamsport during the
past week.
Harry Leveckie, of this place, is
spending a lew weeks with relatives
at Pittsburg.
Mies Myrtle Gregory departed for
Warren last Monday, where she will
visit friends.
J. S. Hauber, of St Marys, formerly
of this place, transacted business here
last Saturday.
Miss Eva Sillman, of St. Marys, was
the guest of Miss Iva McDougal, the
last of the week.
Mrs. Almeda Taggart, of this place,
went to Dußois last Friday to visit
friends and relatives.
Miss Mayme Cuinmings was the
guest of Mr. and Mrs. Charles Lyon at
St. Marys, last Sunday.
Guy Felt and wife, departed for Buf
falo and Rochester, last Sunday, where
they will visit friends.
Mrs. Chester Hockley, of Bethlehem,
is a guest at the home of her parents,
F. D. Leet and family, on Third street.
Prof. H. A. Gehring, principal of the
Flank Road Hollow school, spent the
last of the week with friends at Kane.
J. L. Levan. of Rochester, was the
guest of W. H. Welsh and family at
their home on Fifth street, last week.
Mrs. Lawrence Fisk, went to St.
Marys, last Saturday, having been
called there by the illness of her sister.
Mrs. S. E. Felt has returned to her
home in this place from a visit at sev
eral places in Delaware and New York
City.
Miss Mary Murphy, of Ridgway, is
caring lor Miss Mildred Green, who
is very ill at the home of Mrs. M. A.
Rockwell.
Frank Swayne, a popular ball player
of the New York State League and a
resident of Austin, was in Emporium
last Saturday.
A. McCormick, of Port Allegany,
was the guest of his uncle Daniel Mc-
Cormick and family on East Allegany
Ave., last Sunday.
MissJetttie Wiley and friend Mrs.
Otto Seheu, returned to this place, last
Thursday, from a trip to Atlantic City
and Philadelphia.
Miss Rachel Brookbank, of Drift
wood, was the guest ol R. R. McQuay
and family, at their home on Vine
street, last Sunday.
Boyd Stiles, who has been visiting
friends in this section for several
weeks, returned to his home at Des
Moines, lowa, last Friday.
Mr. and Mrs. George Wykoff return
ed to their home in Bradford last Fri
day, having been called here by the
death of Mrs. Neenan, Mrs. WykofPs
mother.
Mrs. John Schlect has returned to
her home in this place, after visiting
her daughter, Mrs. A. Buckholtz, at
Pittsburg and her son F. G. Yonkers,
at Sistersville, W. Va.
E. B. Healey, of Oswayo, Pa., visit
ed in Emporium on Tuesday, visiting
relatives and friends. Mr. Healey, ac
companied by Mr. Geo. H. Crawford,
of Buffalo, called at the PRESS office.
Hon. B. W. Green is spending the
week transacting business in Tioga
county, where he has large farming in
terests.
L. L. Welsh, of this place, transacted
j business at Ridgway last Tuesday.
W. S. Walker, Austin, was a business
caller at this place on Wednesday.
John Schwab, of Cameron, was a
business caller in this place last Tues
day.
Mr. Roy Kreider, of Driftwood,
transacted business in this place last
Monday.
Dr. H. S. Falk and "Bille" Wright
shot seven pheasants and one mink
yesterday.
Jery Foley, of Renovo, was a guest
at the home of Henry Aochu and family
last Sunday.
"Budd" Johnston, of St. Marys, call
ed on friends in this place last Satur
day and Sunday.
Mr. J. Pitt Felt leaves for Emporia,
Fla., Sunday evening. The PRESS fol
fows him as usual.
Arch Andrews, of Coudersport, was
the guest of relatives and friends at
this place last Sunday and Monday.
J. Pitt Felt left left on Wednesday
for Olean and Friendship N. Y., where
he will visit relatives fof a few days.
Mrs. Coe, of Wampsville, N. Y., was
called here last week on account of the
serious illness of her brother, Mr. E. G.
Coleman.
Messrs. John E. Smith, of Sterling
Run and S. P. Kreider of Driftwood,
were business callers at this place last
Wednesday.
Mr. and Mrs. John Fenton, returned
home last Saturday from a visit to
Rochester and other northern cities,
having had a pleasant visit.
Messrs. J. H. Stephens and H. VV.
Mitchel were guests of the former's
parents, Mr. Addison Stephens and
family, at Coudersport, last Sunday.
Miss Mabel Cummings, of this place,
departed for Howard, Pa., on Wednes
day, where she will spend the winter
with his sister, Mrs. George Leathers.
Edward M. Coleman, of Olean, who
was called here on account of the ill
ness of his father, Mr. E. G. Coleman,
returnee home last Sunday, on account
of school. He will come back to Em
porium on Friday evening.
M. J. Colcord, editor of the Potter
Journal, was a PRESS visitor last
Saturday for a short time. Potter
county editors are fighters, therefore
we fully agreed with him on every
thing.
J. A. Dice and wife, of Sterling Run,
came to Emporium this morning to take
the noon flyer, on avisitto Philadelphia,
Washington and New York City, to be
absent about two weeks.
Mr. and Mrs. A. F. Andrews have
passed a few days visiting at Warren.
Mr. Andrews came home on Wednes
but his wife will remain there a few
days. The many Emporinm friends of
Mrs. Bert Burrows who resides at
Warren with her husband, will be
sorry to learn that she is in very poor
health.
Moved Into New Home.
Mr. Henry Auchu and family have
moved into their beautiful and commo
dious " residence on Fourth street,
the "imcing" having taken place last
Tuesday. This is one of the most com
plete and up to date homes in this
section of the state and it is the wish
of the PRESS that Mr. and Mrs. Auchu
and family may live long to enjoy
their new home.
Home From Panama.
Miss Ethel Day, arrived home last
Monday evening from Panama, hav
ing been absent one year. Miss Day
had a stormy voyage, having been on
the water nine days and enjoyed (?) '
the experience of a sea storm. She ,
did not sleep for five nights.
CAMERON COUNTY PRESS, THURSDAY, OCTOBER 15, 1908.
A New Song by Progress.
At the forks of the river,
Where the Susquehanna flows;
With our arrows in their quiver,
Only waiting for our foes.
Here our braves in paint and feather,
Olten congregate together;
At the forks of the river.
Where the Susquehanna Hows.
At the forks of the river.
Where the Susquehanna flows,
There we tell the same old story,
That was told us long ago.
How the squaw-man had us cheated,
How our honest braves were treated;
At the forks of the river.
Where the .Susquehanna flow*.
At the forks of the river,
Where the Susquehanna flows;
We're commanded to deliver,
As elections come and go;
In 'B6 they fought us,
And a lesson thus they taught us.
At the forks of the river,
Where the SuSquehanua flows.
At the forks of the river,
Where the Susquehanna flows;
We had dwelt in peace together,
Only battling with the foe.
Till this half-breed to aggrieve us,
Came amongest us to deceive us.
At the forks of the river.
Where the Susquehanna flows.
At the forks of the river.
Where the Susquehanna flows;
Mugwumps will be rejected,
And half-breeds be deposed-
Xn Elk they were selected.
But their schemes we have detected.
At the forks of the river.
Where the Susquehanna Hows.
At the forks of the river,
Where the Susquehanna flows,
Once again we are united.
Solidly against our foes.
But the shadow of a Gufl'y,
Had better never go.
To the forks of the river,
Where the Susquehanna *o\vs.
The Wage Earner's Choice.
The great and vital distinction—
which every wage earner should take
home to himself—between Republican
and Democratic revision of the tariff
is that Republicans propose to revise
the tariff in such a way as not to re
duce the wages of or diminish the op
portunities for employment of Ameri
can labor, anil Bryan and his follow
ers propose to cut the tariff down as
near a "free trade basis as they dare,
with entire disregard of the interests
of American labor.
Whether the statement that Bryan
as a Democratic member of the ways
and means committee of'tlie Demo
cratic congress which passed the Wil
son-Gorman tariff bill spoke of Ameri
can working men seeking protection as
"public beggars" is correct or not is
of very slight consequence, because
his lifjelong attitude toward tariff re
vision speaks for itself and shows that
he regards beneficiaries of a protective
tariff, both employers and employed,
as not entitled to the benefits they re
ceive—that is, as just what the oppro
brious epithet designates them.
The Republican party takes the view
and upholds it in speech and in prac
tice that American workers have a
right to protection and that in revising
the tariff that right must be respected.
Such is the difference—as wide and
deep and impassable as difference on a
public question can be—between the
revision the Republican party proposes
and intends to effect and the so called
revision that Bryan represents in his
public record, his platform and his
speeches.
It is for the American wage earner
to decide which kind of revision he
prefers—the Republican revision which
will keep the making of American
goods for America, or the Bryan re
vision, which will give the work of
making American goods to factories in
England and Germany.
If you want to keep the work here
and get paid for doing it, vote for
Taft!
Fob Lost.
A brown ribbon watch fob and watch
charm with monogram, J. H. M.
Finder will please return to PRESS
office.
At Opera House
SATURDAY, Ocf 1 7
MATINEE AND NIGHT * *
That Laughing Musical
Comedy
Hooligan's Troubles
Headed by the Famous Comedian
JAS. B. MACKIE
And a Big Metropolitan Cast.
Mostly Girls.
Handsome Costumes, Effects Etc.
Popular Prices.
|j OUR NEW LINE OF " A Definition of' Definitive
[ This ™ ord when link ed to an arti- fp
112 \\/O I| Dn f%/i}« -frvf* |A A Q c^e ' w '" c^l merits its use, says: Eg]
||j| VV ctll r^dper lUr lyUOi "Madam, beyond this there is noth
rlj —-j- ing to attain." g
jfjp " Su °h a word and such a word only JJjl
ill _ . , „ . (tf'jf/) Cttn properly be used to describe |P
!!ll Consists of the best, things from three factories. Also r" 112 ft
L the Robert Graves Co.'s line of Decoration Paper of all Eaton's p
kinds Hot-Pressed Vellum J,!
The Graves line took first prize in competition at St. U C I I AVH Money cannot buy a better writing Hf
Louis against the world. O. JJLLrXis. P a per, for experience cannot produce !p
yea one.
KMPORII M
MILLING
PRICK LIST.
" '' .num. Aug. 12, HOB
* I 35
HetGrove,J«
Graham, " 70
ii*.ve •. •• :::::::::::: $
Patent Meal '• 55
Buckwheat Flour $1 00
Coarse Meal per 10(1, 1 80
Chop Feed, '• 1 gj
Cracked Corn per 100 ... . 1 80
Screenings •' j 8 0
Oil Meal " 1 85
I Middlings ! 80
oran,... j
Chicken Wheat 1 85
Corn per bushel 1 00
Oyst r Shells, per 100 75
WhiteOatg.pi-r bushel 65
Seed Oats per bushel
Choice Clover Heed, 1
ChoiceTimothySeed, S At Market Prices
Choice Millet Seed.
R.C. DODSON,
THE
DRUGGIST
KMpoßiirn, PA.
n LOCATED IN THE CORNER STORE
A» Fourth and Chestnut Stß..
R.C. IIODNON .
Telephone, 19-2.
A REPUBLICAN TREASURER
Sheatz Beats Berry's Record for
Paying State Money to the
Schools.
From the Pittsburg Gazette Times.
With the sending of a check for
$939,568.07 to Philadelphia State
Treasurer John O. Sheatz has conculd
ed the payment of the state appropria
tion to public schools and broken all
records for prompt transmission of
this money to the school districts.
The appropriation of $7,500,000 be
came available the first day of last
June. Within the unprecedently
short space of four months this sum
been distributed among the school
districts of the 07 comities, the re
motest little red school house sharing
with the more pretentious city schools
the bounty of the commonwealth.
No state treasurer in the history of
Pennsylvania has come anywhere i
near the record made by Treasurer
Sheatz in the distribution of Stato
money to the schools, not even Wil
liam 11. Berry, the recent Democratic I
treasurer. Under the system ot
prompt payments inaugurated by
Treasurer Sheatz, all the schools have j
all their state money practically at the i
opening of the term.
Payment of so large a sum as $7,-
500,000, mostly in small quantities, in
so short a time as four months, has in- I
volved much extra work on the part
of the state treasurer and his office
staff during the hot summer months,
but they stuck bravely to the task and
everybody in the department is happy
over the outcome.
English Spavin Liniment removed
Hard, Soft or Calloused Lumps and
Blemishes from horses; also Blood
Spavins, Curbs, Splints, Sweeney, Ring
Bone, Stifles, Sprains, Swollen Throats,
Coughs, etc. Savo §SO by use of one
bottle. A wonderful Blemish Cure.
Sold by L.Taggart, druggist. 32 6m
Cascusweet, the well known remedy 1
for babies and children, will quiet the !
little one in a short time. The ingre
dients are printed on the bottle. Con- i
tains no opiates. Sold by R. C. Dodson. \
For Sale.
One cow giving milk and three calves,
born June and July. Just suited for;
butchering. Also five tons of hay.
One horse nine years old, suitable for
all work, and one light spring wagon.
Inquire at this office or Chas. Edgar,
WliittercoreHill. 30tf.
For Sale.
An eight roomed house situated on
j East Fifth street, next to primary
; School building. For terms apply to
! this office.
Kodoi is a combination of the natural
digestive juices and it digests all classes
of food and every kind of food, so vou see
it will do the work that the stomach it
self does. Sold by 11. C. Dodson.
To those afflicted with kidney and
bladder trouble, backache, rheumatism.
Pineules for the Kidneys bring relief in
the first dose. Hundreds of people to
day testify to their remarkable healing
and tonic properties. 30 days' trial
81.00 The purify the blood. Sold by
R. C. Dodson. 3m
Itch cured in 30 minutes by Wood
ford's Sanitary Lotion. Never fails
Sold by L. Taggart, druggi&i;. 32-fim.
If you are a sufferer from that most
distressing affliction, piles, and have tried
many remedies without beiDg benefitted
we can safely say that ManZan
Pile Remedy will bring relief with the
first application. Sold by R. (J. Dod
son- 3m.
Latest Popular Music.
Miss May Gould, teacher of uiano
forte has received a full line of the lat
est and most Popular sheet music. All
the popular ai. \ Popular and class
ical music. Prices reasonable.
44- tf
Warning.
All persons are hereby forbidden from
trespassing upon the property of this
Company without a permit from this
office, or the Manager at the works.
KEYSTONE POWDEB MFG. CO.
Emporium, Pa., August Ist, 1903
24-tf.
WANTED!
Men to represent us either locally or
traveling, in the sale of a full line of
easy selling specialties. Apply quick
and secure territory.
ALLEN NURSERY CO.,
33-16t. Rochester, N. Y.
FRIDAY AND SATURDAY BARGAINS 1
I Selected f\ A TS9 C 1
a™ 1 * LJJ\ i 5r as 1
Trimmed Granulated I
I shoulder The Satisfactory Store sugar y
A lb 10c J $1.55 A
We always quote special values for Friday and |j
Saturday, on which substantial savings can be made. I
Examine every item in this list and compare with any I
you know of. I
li2c canned Peas, Early June, the can 10c. £
Ceylon, Oolong or Japan Tea, 50c grade a lb 40c. J
7 cakes Oak Leaf Soap for 25c. •'>
Kest California Lemons a dcz 20c. H
Royal Baking Powder, Ilb can 45c. *
Dunham's Shredded Cocoanut a lb 35c. I Burnham
Burnham and Morrill's Baked Beans 20c cans* two ft
IHienz's 25c Apple Butter the can 20c.
Rice Pop Corn, crop of 1907, lb 6c.
New Crop Malaga Grapes i6clb.
IN HOUSE FURNISHING DEPARTMENT
I Regular 65c galveuized Tubs, special 55c
Regular 75c galveuized Tubs, special 65c.
Regular 85c galveuized Tubs, special 75c.
"Mrs. Pott's Sad Irons, per set 98c.
Regular 25c cold handled Acme Frying pan 20c.
Regular 10c wood Spoon, special sc.
• Fresh fancy lit 112 akp Fi«h LEAVE ORDERS FOR DE I
IneMi laugni LaKe risn LIVERY FRIDAY MORNING I
Best Quality Baltimore Shucked Oysters I
I Choicest Fresh Fruits and Vegetables. I
Fancy Cheese, imported and domestic. I
Prompt delivery to all parts of town ft
I You G-et Better Values Here. j
J, H. DAY, |
ft Phone 6. Emporium. A
—— ——
"Hooligan's Troubles."
The screaming farce, "Hooligan's
Troubles," comes to Emporium Opera
House, OP Saturday evening, Oct. 17th,
is a play that provokes genuine and
nearty laughter. Its situations ard
extremely humorous and its lines bright
and genuinely witty. The story that
furnishes the ground work for the play
is quite simple, but there is not a dull
moment from the opening scene to the
fall of the curtain. A large chorus of
pretty girls in costumes that are en
tirely new are an attractive addition.
Some of the gowns worns worn are the
latest models from the Parisian plates.
Executor's Notice.
Estate of JAMES SANFORD, Deceased,
IETTERS testamentary on Uieestate of James
Ji Sanford, late of the township of Sliippen,
Cameron'county, Pennsylvania, deceased, have
been granted to George W. Leavitt, residing in
said township, to whom all persons indebted to
said estate are requested to make payment, and
those having claims or demands, will make
known the same without delay to
GEORGE W. LEAVITT, Executor.
GREEN & KELT, Attorneys.
Emporium, Pa., Oct. 6th, 1908—14-lt.