GRAPES, f.' ,-r. thev- nr.: * L-. ,-■'. *)?1B 1 L" ? V ■'-. v- properties., give RC fj-ii. itx > active and principal : .zj_- ,\dien£ BaJciittf Pom&iF AbsolutelyP,?P£& j^i '.g It 13 economy to use Royal Baking Powder. ..'-^3 |l|j It saves labor, health and money. U||a /' Where the best food is required no other j|||| Jf baking powder or leavening agent can take the jg|ll place or do the work of Royal Baking Powder. LOCAL DEPARTMENT. PERSONAL GOSSIP. Contributions invited. Thai which pou would tike to see in thin department J* t u* know by pos tal card, letter or j^crnonallj. Robert Graham, of Cameron, trans acted business at Emporium last Tuep day. Mrs. Henry Auchu wascalled to Wil liamsport on Tuesday by the death of an uncle. Mrs. Joseph Kaye, of this place, is a guest of relatives at Frendale, N. Y., this week. J. B. Meisel, Emporium's expert candy maker, is transacting busitiess a) Buffalo this week. Mrs. Charles Specht, of this place, was a business caller to the PRESS of fice lsst Tuesday. Miss Odell Herron and B. S. Guns burg, of Renovo, were visitors at this | place on Wednesday. Mrs. E. F. Zwald and Miss Alice QuigKley were pleasant PRESS office callers on Wednesday afternoon. W. H. G. Walker, of the Calder Brick Works, was a business caller at this place the last of the week. Mrs. John Conkwright, ot East Em porium, was a business caller at the PRESS office on Wednesday afternoon, I John Anderson, of Altoona, was a i guest of bis parents, Rev. and Mrs. J. j F. Ariderson, during the week. Evard Klock, of East Emporium, j transacted business for his father, E. j L. Klock, at the PRESS office last I Saturday. Mr. Perry Robarts, an old veteran, 1 Is in very poor health and goes to ! Philadelphia in a few days for medical j treatment. Misses Lena and Lizzie McDonald ; returned home last Thursday from . Buffalo, having spent a week in that I city where Miss Lizzie received treat- I ment for her eyes. Earl B. Saunders, of Buffalo, made ■ his usual business trip here the last of i the week and called on the local hard- i ware stores at this place. Miss Christina McDonald, who has been visiting relatives and friends at Pittsburg and other western points in the state, has returned to her home in this place. "Frank .J. Kelly, of Austin, transacted business at this place last Friday and was registered at the New Warner. Misses Ophelia and Lillie Card and Mrs. G. Eaton, of this place, were PRESS office callers last Saturday Miss Ophelia Card is one of our paid up subscribers. Allen Randolph departed for Buffalo last Monday morning, where he has entered a business school to take a three months' course. George Fetter has accepted the position at the bank during the absence of Mr. RaDdolpb. C. H. Cordie, formerly of this place, but now of Pittsburg, was a caller here this week, returning yesterday. "Jim" is always sure of a welcome in Empori um in Emporium. Miss Mary C. Welch, who is attend ing Lock Haven State Normal School, was a guest of her parents, Mr. and Mrs. James Welch over Sunday. D. C. Hayes has been confined to his bed for two weeks, suffering with ner vous prostration. He is some better at this writing, we are pleased to learn. Miss Encie Howard, of this place, is visiting friends at New York City, Albany and other places in New York State and will be absent for several weeks. F. V. Heilman departed for Philadel phia last Tuesday evening to be pres ent at the convention of the Penn'a Retail Hardware Association, which convenes there Feb. 10, 11 and 12th. E. J. Saunders and family, who have been at Cross Forks, Potter county, for the past 15 months have returned to this place, and will reside here per manently. JTbeir many friends will be pleased to welco me them back. Miss Rena Housler has returned to her home in this place from Kane, where fhe accompanied her little cousin, Elizabeth Hauber, who will make her home with her aunt, Mr?. Biber, at that place. John Coyle and family have moved from the house t hey have been occupy ing oil West Fourth street, to one of the Cramer house on Cherry street. Miss Maine Danckleman, of Buffalo is a guest at the home of Mr. and Mrs. John Gumming* on South Broad street. Mrs. G. \V. Evard and children, of Johnsonburg, who have been guests of the former's parents, Mr. and. Mrs John Schlecht and family, for a short time returned to their home on Tues day. :>lr. Evard spent Sunday with his family and relatives at this place. Mr. and Mrs. Jasper Harris have re turned to their home in this place, after a visit with relatives and friends at Philadelphia and New York City. Mrs. Harris has been absent for about two months, and Mr. Harris has heen away for a week, selecting new spring stock. Gerald Horning of West Creek, was a PRESS visitor on Monday and carried home a receipt for another year's PKESS. The young man attends Plank Koad Hollow high school and is mak ing a desperate effort to secure an edu cation. It is very commendable in the young man and we hope his fondest expectations may be realized for he is a seemingly bright young man. Party at Sterling Run. A party of seventeen were pleasantly entertained at the home of Mr. and Mrs. J. A. Dice, at Sterling Run, last Monday evening. Music and games' were indulged in until a late hour, when elegant refreshments were serv ed. Those present were : Misses Floye and Nellie Whiting, Gladys O'Keefe, Alice Strawbridge, Nora Jordan, Net tie Kissel, Kathyrn May, Mrs. Clarence Howlett, and Messrs. Matthew-Gmei mer, Jos. and Jas. Furlong, Clarence Howlett, R. L. Brink and P. F. Bikle. ONE OF THEM. Went to See Legislator. Superintendent Pierce, President A. L. Bell of the Elk County Teachers Association, and Superintendent Lynch of the St. Marys borough schools jour neyed to Emporium Saturday to hold a conference with Representative How ard of that place. The latter gentle man is chairman of the house com mittee on education and the purpose of the educators was to consult with him over a provision in the proposed new school law code, said to effect Elk as well as some other counties to their financial disadvantage.—Ridg way Democrat. Honor Roll. Subscribers of the PRESS who have either sent or called and paid subscrip tions during the week are as follows: Emporinm. Wm. McDonald, Miss Ophelia Card, E. L. Klock, M. J. Leadbetter, Chas. Specht, F. J. Lewis, Jno. Conkwright, E. J. Saunderß, E. F. Zwald, Thos. Radigan, Ward Beaton, Mrs Jno. Kackenmeister. Nathan Silin, Sinnamahoning. $25.00 for a Name. We are now demonstrating in the store a new perfume and we want a name for it. Will you kindly let us show it to you so you may suggest an appropriate name, which, if is the one selected, you will receive $25.00 for your trouble and kindness. The perfume is a delicate, lasting, alluring odor, but at present. "DOES NOT HAVE A NAME TO CALL ITS OWN." It will not cost you anything to sug gest a name. If, when you smell the odor it is BO pleasing to you that you would like to hare some, the price would be 50 cents per ounce. You do not have to buy it to get a chance to win the |25.00. You are entitled to i name for nothing. Sould you pur i chase some of the perfume, you may suggest a name for each half ounce purchased. This perfume is made by the manu- I facturers of Harmony Perfumes. Mrs. M. A. Rockwell, Druggist, The I Rexall Store, Emporium, Pa. 52-3n. Eye Specialist. Prof. W. H. Budine, the well known [ Eye Specialist, of Binghamton, N. Y., { will be at R. H. Hirsch's jewelry i store, Emporium, Pa., Feb. 13th |lf you can't sen well or have | headache don't fail to call and see Prof. J Budine, as he guarantees to cure al 1 j such cases. Lenses ground and fitted lin old frames. Eyes tested and ex - j amined free. All work guaranteed. CAM ERON COUNTY PRESS, THURSDAY, FEBRUARY N, 1909. Cutting It Short. A British lieutenant lu tho Second battalion, Lincolnshire regiment, who was called Leo ijuintus Tollemache- Tolleinaclie dc Orellana Plantagenet Tollcinaclie-ToUeninchc, gave notice by means of advertisement that he re nounced the names of Quint us Tolle mache-Tollfiuache l'lantagenet Tolle maclie and should henceforth upon all occasions and at all times sign and use and be (jailed and known-by the name of I.no tie Orellana Tollemache only. Canada's Inland Sea. People tit home who have only seen Hudson-bay on the map have mainly regarded It as a patch of polar desola tion, forbidding and unexplored. In reality it is nothing of the kind. It is a huge inland sea as large as the Med iterranean reaching down into the center of the Canadian continent. Milling. > Dumb Money. Little Elmer Mamma, this nickel you gave me this morning must be counterfeit. Mamma—Why do you think so, dear? Littlo Elmer—Well, * hear papa say thai money talks, and I've had this money a whole day and it hasn't said a word. Chicago News. Modern Art. Art in our time seems like an iri- 1 descent oil spread about on the snr- j face of the muddy waters of our civ ilization; it and life don't mix.—Lon don Saturday Review. The Means to the End. Mrs. Benliam -Why does a man hate his mother-in-law? Hunlmm- Oh. he doesn't hate her: lie simply hates to think of tlic way vlie got into his fam ily.—Harper's Weekly WASHINGTON LETTER. I From our Regular Cm-respondent.l WASHINGTON, Feb. 7, 19()!L. The best known stie-t of Washing ton, Pennsylvania Avenue, is beginn ing to assume an inaugural holiday ap pearance. Seats aiid grand stands have been built in front of the White House, where the President-, after his inauguration on the 4th of .March, the diplomatic corps and high government officials will sit to observe the grand parade. Thousands of others will oc cupy seats on both sides of the Aven ue, at prices vary ng from one to two dollars. As is usual, the mile etretch of Avenue from the Trea ury Depart ment to the Capitol grounds on the south side wid be lined with seats or bleechers, very much after the manner of those used in baseball. Windows all along the Avenue on both sides, are rented at exhorbitant prices and from these thousands will gaze at the mili tary, political and civic processions as they pass to and from the Capitol As has been already observed Presi dent Roosevelt will be seen in the car riage only as it proceeds to the Capitol. He will not return with his successor to the White House, but wilt go direct to the Union Station and there take a train for his home at Oyster Bay. THEY INJURE CHILDREN Ordinary Carthartics and Pills and harsh Physic Cause Distressing Complaints. You cannot be over-careful in the se lection of medicine for children. Only the very gentlest bowel medicine should ever be given. Ordinary pills, cathartics and purgatives are too apt to do more harm than good. They cause griping, naseau and other dis tressing after-effects that are frequent ly health-destroying and a life-lasting annoyance. We personally recommend and guar antee Rexall Orderlies as the safest and most dependable remedy for constipa tion and associate bowel disorders.— We have such absolute faith in the su preme virtues of this remedy that we sell it on our guarantee of money back ic every instance where it fails to give entire satisfaction, and we urge all in need of such medicine to try it at our risk. Rexall Orderlies contain an entirely new ingredient which is odorless, taste less and colorless. It embraces all the best qualities of the soothing, laxative, strengthening and healing remedial ac tive principles of the best known intes tinal regulator tonics Rexall Orderlies are extremely pleas ant to take, are particularly prompt and agreeable in action, may be taken at any time, day or night; do not cause diarrhoea, naseau, griping, excessive looseness, or other undesirable effects. They have a very natural action upon the glands and organs with which they come in contact, act as a positive and regulative tonic upon the relax, dry muscular coat of the bowel, remove ir ritation, dryness and soreness, over come weakness, and tone and strength en the nerves and muscles, and restore the bowels and associate organs to j more vigorous and healthy activity. Rexall Orderlies not only cure con i stipation, but they remove the cause of this ailment. They also overcome the necessity of constantly taking laxatives to keep the bowels in normal condi tion. There ia really no similar medicine so good as Rexall Orderlies, especially for.children, aged and delicate persons. They are prepared in tablet form and in two sizes of packages; 12 tablets, 10c and 36 tablets, 25c. Mrs. M. A. Rock well, Emporium, Pa. Fine for Kirtncys, Here in 11 simple home-made mixture as given by an eminent authority on Kidney diseases, who makes the state ment that it will relieve almost any case of Kidney trouble if taken before the stage of Cright's disease. He states that such symptoms as lame back, pain in the side, frequent desire to urinate, espieially at night; painful and dis colored urination, are readily over borne. Here is the recipe. Try it. Fluid Extract Dandelion, one-half ounce; Compound Ivargon, one ounce; Compound Syrup Sarsaparilla, three ounc p. Take a teaspoonful alter each meal and at bedtime. These ingredients are all harmless and easily mixed at home by shaking well in a bottle. This mixture lias a pecular healing and soothing effect up on the entire Kidney and Urinary structure, and often overcomes the worst forms of Rheumatism in just a little while. This mixture is said to move all blood disorders and cure Rheumatism by forcing the Kidneys to filter and strain from the blood and system all uric acid and foui, decom composed waste matter, which cause these afflictions. Try it if you aren't well. Save the prescription. Kodol lor Dyspepsia ami Indigestion does the ordinary work of the stomach, so that bv taking a little Kodol every now and then you cannot possibly have indigestion or auy form of Stomach trouble. Sold by It. C. Dodson. EMPORIUM Mi LUNG CO MP AN). PRICE LIST. Emporium, Pa., Feb. 4, 1909. NEMOPHILA, per sack 40 Kelt's Fancy, " 1 65 Pet Grove, " 1 65 Uraham, " 70 Rye " 80 Patent Meal " 50 Buckwheat Flour 8S Buckwheat Flour, 101b sack 35 lioarse Meal per 100, 1 50 Chop Feed " 1 50 Matchless Egg Maker, per 100 2 50 Cracked Corn per 100 1 50 Screenings " 1 5n Oil Meal " 1 85 Middlings, 1 60 Bran 1 50 Chicken Wheat 185 Corn per bushel 84 Oyst r Shells, per 100 75 WhileOals,p«r bushel.. 65 Seed Oats per bushel Buckwheat 1 70 Alfalfa Meal 1 40 Choke Clover Seed, 1 ChoiceTiraothy Seed, > At Market Prices Choice Millet Seed. > R.C. DODSON, THE DRUGGIST ICTO I-Oltri'lW . PA. ill IS LOCATED IN THE CORNER STORE At Fourth and Chestnut Sts. R.C. UUIiMtM. Telephone, 19-2. 1 J. B. Meisel's j I Saturday Candy Silt J 7 Continues popular with lovers of \ J fresh home-made candies. High c 3 in quality and low in price. Our j \ NOUGAT "tastes like more," \ ? Special Saturday 25c per lb. c 3 Our large variety of Taffies and ) 1 Brittles at 10c per lb are unsur- \ ? passed. Crisp fresh Salted Pea- 2 i nuts at 10c lb. \ } OUR MOTTO ) C Purity & Cleanliness \ 112 Ice Cream, and Grape Juice J \ for Invalids s \ J. B. MEISEL. \ <jt» -t will buy five pas- A v/U sender gasoline touring car. First class running condition. Address !•'. C. C., 304 Delaware Av.-., M utTalo, N.Y. r~ Notable Kitchen Specialties i V They will give you more satisfaction than anything you I can buy for the same amount of money. ® •F DAY'S'" I OLIVE OIL BLFNO I The Satisfactory Store 25c, 50. 75c TEA 75c Lb Attractive Prices for Friday and Saturday, | Yoti tal-e no risks buying Groceries here. jjj§, I Groceries i| Sugar—2slb Bag best granulated Sugar, $1.45. || Soap 7 cakes Oak Leaf Soap for 25c. S Niagara Corn Starch a lb. Bc. If Cuirants—lib pkge cleaned currantsßc. ||- Churches Arm and Hammer Brand Soda Bc. V Dunham's Shredded Cocoanut a lb 35c. A I Very Choice California Lima Beans—a lb. Bc. as- Chocolate "Jello" 3 pkgs for 25c. P~- Fancy White Honey in sections 2 for 35c. Choice Norway Mackerel,small fish, but fine 15c lb " Coffee, 20c Blended Coffee 2lbs for 35c. Nuts—l9oß crop. Hickory Nuts, the qt 10c. ® I Choicest Fresh Fruits and Vegetables. Early Southern Garden Truck. S Keep watch for new arrivals ■ I Baltimore Shucked Oysters & Lake Fish In the House Furnishing Department Regular 35c. 6 qt., Grey Enameled Berlin Kettle, 25c. $ Regular 35c, 2 qt., Blue and White Coffee Pot, 25c. & Rtpular 40c, Pressed Glass Tummbler, the dozen, 30c. fl Regular 25c, Glazed Cuspidor, 19c. jf FREE DELIVERY to all parts of Town ! | Twice Each Day fl You G-et Better Values Here. § J. H. DAY, s L Phone 6. Emporium, ft mmmmmmmmmmmmmmmmmmmmmarn i Coppersmith's 1 I Bargains I J CONTINUED INVENTORY SALE B DlanlfOtQ Bathrobe and Bed (||| Ip Ululmulu Blankets,very cheap Ladies Furnishings—A most complete |||! at greatly reduced prices. I Special, «s 1 111 A great reduction in prices, on ||* fP Winter Kimonas, short and long, Ladies and Infants night robes made of the best outing flannel; for style and comfort are un- -J H OUTING FLANNELS. jjj 111 12c Outings reduced to 10c lip 10c Outings reduced to 8c !|jp | COPPERSMITH'S iBL j
Significant historical Pennsylvania newspapers