EMPORIUM MILLING COMPANY, j Daisy Dairy Feed The Undisputed Leader of All Alfalfa- 1 Molasses Feeds. HIGHEST NUTRITION, GREATEST I DIGESTIBILITY. UNRIVALED j MILK PRODUCER. Keeps Stock in Pink of Condition. PRICE LIST. Emporium, Pa., Nov. 30, 1910. NEMOFHILA, per sack 10 Felt's Fancy, " ' Pet Grove, " ' Holler Meal " 50 Rye " ™ Graham i New Buckwheat Flour. 24 lb. sack, 75 New buckwheat Flour. 10 lb. sack 35 Coarse Meal per 1 J 25 Chop Feed. .. 1 25 Cracked Corn per 100 125 White Middlings 1 Hran J Chicken Wheat * ® Screenings '* 1 25 Oil Meal 4 ' 12 5 Corn per bushel White Oats, perbushel, Oyster Shells, per 100 «'•* Sterling Chick Feed 2 00 Sterling Scratch Feed 1 H P Daisy Dairy Feed, 1 j® Calf Meal. 50 lbs... 1 50 Cotton Seed Meal, 1 80 j Mammoth 'lover Seed pi r bu. 10 56 Medium lover Seed, " 1" 59 Alsyke Clover Seed, " 10 59 Timothy Seed. 41 5 00 German Millet Seed. 44 2 25 112 w IPure Norweigan Cod Liver Oil j Just received. If you I are in a run down con dition try a bottle and I note the quick results. I I l Godson's Drug Store Phone 19. 1.0C.U, OIU'ARTMIiNT. PERSONAL liOSSIf. Contributions invited. Thai which you would I ke to see in thin department.Jet UH know by po..- < ial card, letter or perxonallu. E. B. Saunders, of Buffalo, N. Y., \ was a business caller at this place, the lirst of the week. Miss Eva Leet spent Saturday and ; Sunday with friends at Ridgway, re turning to Emporium, Monday morn ing. Miss Maude Stephens, of Couders port, is spending a short time in town, guest at the home of Henry Aucbu and family. Messrs. R. K. Mickey, A. F. Vogt and B. O. Erskine spent a shirt time in St. Marys, last Monday, transacting business. Messrs. H. C. Fleminings and John McDonald, of Driltwood, came to Em porium last Sunday afternoon and spent the evening in towo. Miss Edna Auchu returned to her home at this place, last Friday morn ing from Philadelphia, where she re ceived treatment for her eyes. Messrs. George Marker, Jr, and Charles Robison spent a short time in St. Marys, last Saturday. They return- ' ed home on the afternoon train. Miss Rot ha Krelder, of Driftwood one of the valued Cameron county teachers, spent a short time at the County Heat last Saturday, attending to business. Mrs. Mary Hutier called at the Pkkmi office on Saturday morning am! renewed her subscription for an other jear. Mrs. Hutier is alwa>s very prompt in this matter. Mrs. John E. Smith, of Sterling Hun, (•pent a .short time in Emporium l*i»t Friday, attending (lie meeting of tl e Cameron C .unty Sunday School A social ion, of which sht« is treasurer Hun. N. I*. Minard, of Four Mile, made the Ph*. i office a social ami buaii.t-aa cull lant Saturday morning, rt - newiug ilia auh»< rip! ion fur the I'm alao that of ills son Mr. Freil Minard, of Clark, I.a. (leorge \V. Keith, of Cututrrapovt »pfiit Wednesday in town, gui-at at the home of .Mm. S E. Sterner, Broad street. Mr. Keith pla>rd the vt.din at the dance of tin Emporium Social Club, Wednesday evening. Mis# I'lyiithla \Vu»xl, til Ponder* port, sjs-nt it ahurt time in town, the n rat of the week, of h«-r Mraiidmolh Mm. U 1.. I.ay M ia* VV>«ml was Mr mwrl) itie litiotv |m operator in liie] fi.t u r Eutt-rpi t- •• ..s i idt i end being ißl«u«Us! in in » < i work msde IN I'm i i.|fu< t Ml call," Monday tlWiiuun Mr. M. F. Miller and fami'y spent a few hours in llidgway last Sunday. George Wright, is spending a few j | days at Glean, N. Y., transacting busi- j ! ness. T. J. Butler was a business caller at ! ! Olean for a short time last Wednesday, j returning home on the evening train. Mrs. Gus Carlson went to St. Marys lon Wednesday afternoon, where she i spent a short time guest of her son. Joe McNarney, a cadet at West I Point, is spending a short time in town guest at the home of his parents, J. P. McNarney and wife. Misses Ada and Catherine Zwald, ot I this place, were very pleasant Press I office callers last Thursday afternoon. Miss Ethel Blackman who has been visiting Miss Isabel Johnson for the past week returned to her home at Machias, New York. Monday. Miss MableCummings, who has been spending some time, guest of her sis ter, Mrs. G. H. Leathers, at Howard, Pa., has returned to her home at this place. Mr. Alva Hendrix, of Dents Run, | visited in town Tuesday guest of his uncle William Swartz and family, Maple street George Metzger, manager of the ! telephone system at this place, went to Olean and Buffalo on Wednesday, ! where he will transact business for a few days. Mr. Elmore Hickok, of Oshanter, | Clearfield county, Pa., visited his ! brother A. L. Ilickok and family a few | days past week. Tiiis is the first time [ the brothers have met in ten years. Miss Anna Welsh departed for ! Mrdina, N Y., Wednesday morning, ! where she will spend a short time, 5 guest at the home of her broteer, Mr. ; Ralph Welsh and family. Clarence Corson, one of the official | stenographers of the P. R. R. Com i pany, from Williamsport, is stationed |in the freight office at this place. Mr. | Corson is a very pleasant young I gentleman. Messrs. J. A. Fisher and Charles j Fisher, of this place, were called to ! Plumville, Pa., the last ofthe week, by the death of their father, whose demise occurred last Saturday. Interment was made on Monday and Mr. J. A. Fisher returned home on Tuesday, i Mrs. Joseph Kinsley, of Sinr.rima | honing, is spending the week in town I guest of her sister, Mrs Clinton i Ostrum, at East Emporium. Mrs. Kin | sley made the PRESS office a business 1 call this (Thursday) morning, renew- ; | ing her subscription for another year. | Hon. John McDonald, of Driftwood, i j was a business caller at Emporium to- j j day (Thurday) and called at the PitEsS i office changing the date of his prper well into 1911. Carl Swanson has returned to his home at this place, after spending the past week, transacting business in the interests of the Keystone National Powder Company at various places in (he eastern part of the State. Miss Catherine Welsh, daughter of Mr. and Mrs. Jan. J. Welsh, of this place, was a buniness caller at the Pkkss office on Tuesday afternoon, re newing the subscription of their own paper and that of Mrs. Brady, at De troit, Mich. A. W. Wiilahan, of Port Allegany, spent the week's end at this place and Howard Siding, where he was enter tained as guest of friends. Mr. Willa han's visits are becoming frequent and we are afraid that he will soon capture the heart of one of our fair stenograph ers Port Allegany hoys are all to the good. Miss Myrtle S Sliafer, flour lady ot the Siunamahonitig powder plant shell house, who came up to Emporium to spend Sunday with her friends, was a Puksh buaim s caller Saturday even ing, accompanie I by Mi- s Hlanch Lud uni Both are very pleasant ladies I and full of busiiieHrt tact. mmmm t 1 [sp'aking of the j Divorce Evil j —I JE— 'I IIIU. t'lt e> il fn tuallMM w X *,lvri" < H ' 'KP the e i.-<-I>t th<-1; ■. »1 ,i.>r i- lo culrapr ri,divnrctJ hia wlte a- I • e «iit j •»'•«! i> I rip I he e »! t r.ii*<- hia • hUiiien. It 11 »t ft. i. is tr I rv f'l <]< mi >i folia a- I funtral «<- l-ri ir# in a th«n Uv fc hta wile in a '. )« iid* When aJvertiaing ia dtxHtr***!, hti ttnv»s jiic c«u 6ecuai«4 fuHurm. Tia« |«|*i h biiM' % y»a« ■ ■« -1 ■ l«» i I •> i it ball |i t* t. .i ' an •*!'». k ■ w M.m i>«t I I,« i - ■ m li 4. bant, « it V M.CM* <1 at% - IttMnf. r A MFRON COTTyf y PR!'. C >«. TTT ttt> J ANUARY 19. 1911. Too Public For Him. He was a mild inuuiicred little man. ■ ; short, with gray hair and spectacles j ! It was 110011 on Washington street, anil, as usual, the crowds were shov- > ing and pushing to got somewhere. The little man was trying to worm his way through the crowds. A well dressed woman, accompanied | by. a small boy, was mixed tip in the j crowd. She wanted to cross the street, j The boy stopped to look ill a window. > The lady reached down aiul grasped a hand, saying, "Take my hand, dear." ' "Not right here on the public street." | she was startled to bear some one re- ' ply. j Looking down, she saw that she was , • clasping the hand of the very inoffen- j sive little man, who seemed to be j much confused and embarrassed. "Sir," she said haughtily, 'I don't want you. I want my son."-—Boston . Traveler. The New and Old Geology, In its early history geology present- i ed two schools mi" iiisistinu on a doc- j trine of "catastrophes." the other 011 a doctrine of "uniformity." The for- i nter regarded the changes which have j manifestly taken place in our planet j 11s having occurred at epochs abruptly, while the other school, reposing on the great principle of the invariability i of the laws of nature, insisted that af- 1 fairs had always gone on in the same | way as they do now. It is hardly : necessary to say lha the latter theory > has driven the old theory of catastro phe completely from the field.—New York American. All Fixed. "I think I'll propose at the party to- , nlfdit." "No, you won't." "Why won't I?" "My sister knows the young lady in question, and it lias boon arranged for you to propose at the ball next week." —Kansas City Journal. Restaurant Repartee. "Tea or coffeeV" demanded the bus tling waitress. lie smiled benignly. "Don't tell me; let me guess." lie whispered. Brook lyn Life. Where the Shoe Pinched. Crawford Does your conscience trouble you for losing that money? Crabshaw—No, but my wife does. You see, it was her money.—Judge. The fewer desires the more peace.— Wilson. WASHINGTON LETTER. [From our Regular Correspondent.] AVASIIINGTOV, Jan. 'j:s, 1910. International Exposition boomers for ■ the celebration of the completion of j Panama Canal are at work in Wash- I ington. San Francisco and New Orleans are the contending cities. The capitol of the United States, where the exposition should really be held, is net saying much San Francisco is nour ishing seventeen million dollars as her claim, while New Orleans with ten mil ! lions insists that this amount will go further owing to the proximity of that city to the rest of the world, than will seventeen millions on the Pacific slope. An advocate for New Orleans puts it that Congress will be responsible in saying which city is most accessible to all the people of the United States, claiming that New Orleans is two thousand miles closer to the center of population, and two thousand miles nearer to Panama than San Francisco and that the latter city is more than three thousand miles farther from the principal nations which are likely to send exhibits. It is claimed that the center of population of the United States is near Cincinnati and tiv® hun- VVhen You Want Flowers You Want US We have everything you may want in Flowers, Plant-, or Hhrubery, nnd make a spi cialty of choice Funeral Work or Decorations. Express pre paiil on all orders of SIO.HO or over. | < >rder direct of Mountain Park Greenhouse. Ithlt>\%a.v, I*ii, TIIB Imperial Kitchen Elevator § Holds Everything for the Table It i» out of Night ami out of miiitl until you puxh tint button, then ini tuutliiiti ly iu rcHt'h, m itliout }ihy»luiil • itoit. It cliiiugt'ii ill health to good lllttllll, 11,1' I Ui»trtot a*C»u>, i in p.. 11 >llll i' i dred miles from New Orleans, while San Francisco is two thousand five hundred miles from this center. With in nine hundred miles of New Orleans, it is said, there are seventy cities with a combined population of twenty mil lions, while within nine hundred miles of San Francisco are only eight cities and their combined population is one million. With Washington as a start ing point, it is said that it takes four days to reach San Francisco and only a little more than one day to reach New Orleans, while the cost including sleeping berth to San Francisco is §93, and to New Orleans s4'?. All these ar guments to the pocket are important but apply with still greater force to the selection of Washington, which is clos er to the population of the United States and to the world than either New Orleans or San Francisco. To those who have followed the social, industrial and political tendencies of the Pacific slope for the last five years, a serious objection to holding an in ternational exposition in San Francis co is that that city is rantankerously opposed to the Japanese, Chinese and other Orientals who necessarily make such a large part of every internation al exposition and that, should the exposition he held there, there would be perpetual danger of artificial earthquakes more serious in their ultimate effects than the catas trophe which destroyed San Francisco a few years ago. Statistics show that our exports to China have /declined from fifty-eight millions five years ago to fifteen mil lions in 1910. The Chinaman is fre quently referred to as an enigmatical creature, but those who have studied him in his own habitat realize that there is a great deal of human nature in him and that he has abundant shrewd common sense. The Chinaman is not a first-class fighting man, but he is not unresentful of wrong. He has been outrageously treated in this country and especially on the Pacific coast and organized into unions as a European army into regiments, the word has gone forth to boycott American wares. It is as nothing to the average China man or to the Chinaman much above the average, that this country remit ted some millions of the Boxer indem nity. That was a State affair, and the average Chinaman knows nothing of state affairs, and there is no word in the Chinese language tor patriotism because the idea is totally non existent in the Celestial Kingdom. The President has sent a message to Congress urging fortification of the Pan am i Canal. Ifo want- five million of ....irs Lu stii.'t the work. Nothing will (j li'tl ly enlist sentiment in fivorofe rthworks and guns for the e in il than the opposition which is ap pearing in the British and Japanese papers. A fine fresh line of Samoset. Two brands, "Chief of Them AH" and"To the Queen's Taste." We still continue to make our own "home-made cand it . i ies. SEGER & CO. Phone 21 I® White Lilly Flour Always Pleases 1-8 Bbl Sack 85c; 1-4 Bbl. Sack $1.60 I Purchase price cheerfully refunded if not satisfactory in I every particular. i: I "CLOVER HEINZ J HILL»DAIRY fi Z1 V DILL % CHEESE PICKLES ft The Satisfactory Store I 22c Lb J 15c Doz Y ■ "Business" ' s unian service. Only the busy are I happy generally speaking. Systematic I daily occupation is our greatest blessing." For more than twenty years we have been "busy" giving to the | people of this vicinity otir best linn/an service" and are still here to continue the same. Watch for our week end special sales. Take ad- I I vantage and save money. Here's the List for this week "Peerless" Evaporated Milk, tall cans ire. Fresh Fig Bars or Atlantics, 15c Goods lb i2]/>. 35c "Suukist" California Oranges doz 30c. Pure hog Lard in bulk i6c. lb. (Walter liaker & Co's Chocolate the lb3sc. ■ 1 lb carton Niagara Corn Starch Sc. ft 15c High grade Wet Mince Meat, a lb £ Proctor & Gamble's Lenox Soap 7 cakes for 25c. || Three 10c packages Roses Roasted Rye for 25c. ■ eis 110 substitute for Rye, once the taste is acquir- ft ed. A IOC package makes eight pounds of cooked food One $2.48 Pioneer" Clothes Wringer, $2.19. 3 One #3.80 Anchor brand Clothes Wringer $2.89. ft One sl.lO Mrs. Pott's Sad Iron Set, 3 sizes 98c. A Sanitary Baltimore Shucked Oysters & Lake Fish ft I LEAVE ORDERS FOR DELIVERY EARLY FRIDAY a. m Delivery to all Parts of Town Twice Each Day. | I You Get Better Values Here. J. H. DAY, ■ 0 Phone 6. Emporium. ft IP jasper Harris* Opposite Post Office, EMPORIUM PA. mi 1 ■ 1 i ■ i KEEP YOUR BEST EYE ON THIS SPACE I v *i i Jasper Harris