Cameron County press. (Emporium, Cameron County, Pa.) 1866-1922, August 29, 1901, Page 2, Image 2

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    2
CAMERON COUNTY PRESS.
H. H. MULLIN, Editor.
Published Every Thursday.
TERMS OF SUBSCRIPTION.
»er year *8 0#
If paid la advance ' 50
ADVERTISING RATES;
Advertisements are published at the riite of
one dollar per square for one insertion and fifty
oeuts per square for each subsequent insertion
Rates by the year, or for six or three months,
•re low and uniform, and will be furnished on
application.
Legnl and Official Advertising per square,
three times or less. *2: each subsequent inser
tion to cents per square.
Local notices in cents per line for one inser
•ertlon: 5 cents per line for each subsequent
oonsecutive Insertion.
Obituary notices over five lines. 10 cents per
line. Simple announcements of births, mar
riages and deaths will be inserted free.
Business cards. Ave lines or less. 15 per year;
over nve lines, at the regular rates of adver
tising.
No local inserted for lest than 75 cents per
tiaue.
JOB PRINTING.
The Job department of the PRESS IS complete
and affords facilities for doing the best class of
Kork. PAKTICCLAH ATTENTION PAID TO LAW
PRINTING.
No paper will be discontinued until arrear
ages are paid, except at the option of the pub
lisher.
Papers sent out of the county must be paid
for in advance.
What ho! ye baldheads, look up and
be of good cheer. Here is glorious
. _ , news for you, eom-
A Boon for tlie J
lng from a relialle
Bald-liende<l. gource Jt , g
ways a pleasure to furnish encourage
ment for the bald. Baldheaded men
are appreciative. To gain the grati
tude of a baldheaded man it is only
necessary to tell him his hair may be
made to grow again. And he is ever
reedy to share his last penny with the
man who has a hair restorer. Failure
does not bear him down. He hopes
on, hopes ever; he is always ready to
try, try again. Therefore ihe follow
ing from the London Globe will no
doubt come to the baldheaded as a
thrice welcome message:
"The use of gns to make the hair grow Is
one of the latest medical discoveries. The
gas employed Is oxygen. A large cap tits
tigfitly round the head, and Is supplied with
oxygen from a bag which is slung over the
patient's shoulders. It is worn for a few
hours every day, and even in cases of abso
lute baldness is said to produce a more or
less luxuriant crop of hair. The discovery
was made at the Oxygen hospital, Fitzroy
square, an institution of which princess
Louise Is patron. The gas is used for the
cure of quite a number of diseases. A
woman was undergoing the oxygen cure
for skin disease, and one of her arms had
for many days been placed In a light air
tight box tilled with the gas. It was soon
noticed that on that part of the arm that
was unaffected by (he disease the growth
of hair was much stimulated, and this nat
urally suggested oxygen as a cure for bald
ness. The first experiment was made upon
n woman who had completely lost her hair,
ar.d it was found that after a few weeks'
treatment there was quite a strong
growth."
It is further estimated that the oxy
gen treatment is found to benefit weak
eyes and to cure consumption in a
large percentage of cases, but these
virtues may be lightly passed over if
it will really restore even a fuzz upon
the head of the bald. Let us hope,
chips in the Chicago Record-Herald,
that the day may be speedily coining
when the bald-headed man may, in
stead of paying over his hard-earned
savings to the hairless drug clerk for
hair restorer that refuses to restore,
go about with his little oxygen bag
slung over his shoulder, adding to the
gayety of nations and blissfully fos
tering the hope that never dies.
The postal department has issued a
bound book of receipts for rural mail
The Rural Poxtal Carriere > which re
sembles in a eren-
Sjntem. ,
eral way a check
book, each page containing a stub,
with a perforated line between to fa
cilitate separation, says the Wash
ington News. The book is kept by
the carrier, and the stubs show the
disposal he made of the money in
trusted to him by the patron who
holds his receipt. He is always sup
plied with blank applications, which
the patron fills out himself and gives
him with the money. The carrier's
receipt in this manner becomes the
patron's voucher, showing that lie has
given the carrier his money and his
application; the stub becomes the
carrier's voucher that money and ap
plication have been given to the post
master, and that a money order has
been made out in accordance there
with; and the postmaster's voucher
is found in his own money order book,
where a carbon duplicate of the or
der he has drawn is preserved. The
posmaster may, if the patron desires
and sends him by the carrier's hand
an addressed envelope or letter, slip
the order inside and mail it himself,
or he may give the order to the car
rier to be handed over to the patron
on his next trip past the latter's
place of residence.
That was rather a stalwart prayer
that the little Gardiner boy put up
and was expressive, if not wholly rev
erent, says the Kennebec (Me.) Jour
nal. Living as near neighbors is a fam
ily that is in a deplorable condition, the
mother dead and the four or five chil
dren coming: al-ong'almost any way. One
of the younger male members of this
family has a decided fancy for climb
ing the trees on the premises and has
received a few (juite serious falls; so
when the little four-year-old tot in the
next house was saying his prayer the
other night his mother was horrified
to hear the following clause injected
into it: "O God, take care of the Blank
family. Tommy climbs the trees, and,
O God, see that he doesn't fall and
break his cussed neck." It is needless
to say that that prayer came to a very
abrupt ending.
BRYAN'S "PERHAPS."
Note.—"lt may be observed," said a
prominent politician, "that Mr. Bryan
prefaces all his political utterunces with
bis now famous 'perhaps.' "
The shades of r.ight were falling fast
As through the westejrn country passed
A man who bore, through party ice,
A banner with the strange device:
"Perhaps."
His brow was sad; his hair, beneath
A somewhat damaged laurel wreath,
Was mussed; but like a clarion rung
The accents of tha* tireless tongue:
"Perhaps."
In great Ohio's broad expanse
He saw them try to choke his chance;
They turned his picture to the frail;
He smiled and murmured: "That's no gall—
Perhaps."
"Try not to run,"the rebels yell;
"Imperialism has gone to ,
And capital has come to stay."
He answered, in the same old way:
"Perhaps."
"Oh, stay," a remnant said, "and rest
Your weary head upon this breast."
A tear stood in his blackened eye,
As soft he answered with a sigh:
"Perhaps."
"Beware free silver's withered branch;
■Where is your hard times avalanche?
Bay, won't you ever learn a thing?"
The rebels hear him murmuring:
"Perhaps."
Around, above, below, he sees
The icy portents of a freeze;
He feels the foe upon his track.
But just the same he answers back:
"Perhaps."
From east and west, from south and north,
Come anxious rebels trooping forth.
"We'll down the Matchless Leader," cry
The hungry hordes. He makes reply:
"Perhaps."
"We'll smite him on the thigh and hip,
We want a change of leadership;
Chicago platforms are n. g.,
We'll have a new one." And says he:
"Perhaps."
A traveler, by a little mound,
Half buried in the snow was found,
6till grasping, midst the snow and ice,
A banner with the strange device;
"Perhaps."
There in the twilight, cold and gray,
They stood about him as he lay.
"Thank God," the rebels cry; "he's dead."
Then, turning in the snow, he said:
"Perhaps."
—William J. Lampton, in N. Y. Herald.
REPUBLICAN STALWARTS.
Clenn-t'ut ami I'roKrenaslve State
ment of Principles by the lowa
Convention,
The work of the lowa state con
vention must be viewed with satis
faction by loyal and thinking' repub
licans all over the nation. It nom
inated strong and clean men for the
various state offices. Its platform is
a clear-cut, progressive statement of
republican principles.
The convention justly congratulated
congress upon its currency legisla
tion and upon its dealings with Porto
Rico, Cuba and the Philippines. "The
policy of this government toward the
islands," it said, "has followed inev
itably upon our expulsion of the au
thority of Spain. It has been dic
tated by the conditions present, has
been consistent with the spirit of the
constitution", and the paramount con
sideration fias been to secure the
lasting welfare of these peoples
whose fortunes and destinies have
become in a large degree dependent
upon us."
The convention indorsed the policy
of protection as the foundation of
our industrial and financial independ
ence, but it also recognized that that
policy is a practical one whose ap
plications must change with circum
stances, and indorsed "the policy of
reciprocity as the natural comple
ment of protection, and urge its de
velopment as necessary to the real
ization of our highest commercial
possibilities."
In its declarations concerning so
called "trusts" the convention recog
nized them as useful instruments for
the nation's industrial advancement,
but asserted "the right residing in
the people to enforce such regula
tions as will protect the individual
and society from abuse of the power
which great combinations of capital
wield." No thinking observer of in
dustrial progress could ask for more.
None interested in combinations can
find the lowa attitude unfair or op
pressive.
The lowa convention has spoken
clearly, fairly and worthily of a
great republican state. While the
contest for the various nominations
was keen, it was without rancor.
The lowa republicans have preserved
their old commendable habit of do
ing all their fighting before the nom
inations. United and harmonious, ably
led, advocating principles that appeal
to every loyal and fair-minded Amer
ican, the republican party in lowa
enters upon the campaign with the
best prospects.—Chicago Inter Ocean.
lown'* neputillenitM.
lowa follows Ohio in denouncing
the southern attempt to disfranchise
the negro. In the republican state
convention at Des Moines the follow
ing was adopted:
"We are earnestly opposed to all legisla
tion designed to accomplish the disfran
chisement of citizens upon lines of race,
color or station of life and condemn the
measures adopted by the democratic party
in certain states to accomplish that end."
To this genuine Americanism the
lowa republicans added indorsement
of the protective tariff and of the
gold standard.. On this invulnerable
platform was placed as the candidate
for governor A. J!. Cummins, a prom
inent lawyer of Des Moines, who has
been an lowa legislator and who was
for four years a member of the re
publican national committee. Repub
licanism is not "taking the back
back track." lowa republicans are
witnesses to the truth of that dec
laration. —Troy Times.
C"7"Coin Harvey charges the defeat
of the democratic party last year to
Chairman Jones' mismanagement.
Coin Harvey shouldn't tell tal«s out
of the financial school.—Chicago Trib
une.
CAMERON COUNTY PRESS, THURSDAY, AUGUST 29, 1901.
AN ISSUELESS PARTY.
llopoloHN Flight of the Dcmocraoy
for the C'OIIIIIIK Presidential
Cunipuitf 11.
It was Hon. Charles A. Towne, of
Minnesota, ex-silver republican, ex
populist, ex-democrat, now a develop
er of Texas-"oil gushers" and "out of
politics," who thus recently hit off the
temper and purposes of the democratic
party: "The feeling among democrats
is that they want to win, and they do
not care a rap what sort of a platform
they win on." Mr. Towne's breezy out
burst of cynicism was inspired by the
indecent haste with which the Ohio
democrats turned the campaign litho
graph of Nebraska's "peerless com
moner" to the wall and barred from
their resolutions nny specific indorse
ment of last year's democratic nation
al platform. The Minnesota states
man's candid arraignment of demo
cratic hypocrisy was amply justified by
the Columbus convention's eagerness
to make any sacrifice of principle nec
essary to facilitate immediate party
success. Put if further disclosure of
recreancy had been necessary to jus
tify Mr. Towne's assertion that the
democratic party has entered the final
stage of moral bankruptcy, that dis
closure is furnished in the lamentable
exhibit of political assets offered to
the world by the Maryland democratic
convention.
As has already been noted in these
columns, the Baltimore convention re
fused absolutely to commit itself on
any of the national issues on which it
was compelled to fight the presidential
campaign of 1000. Free silver coinage,
imperialism and the evils of trusts—
the trinity of issues on which Col. liry
an appealed for votes a year ago
were dismissed without a syllable of
approving comment, and in their stead
the utterly misleading and ridiculous
cry of "negro domination" was rais«d
to justify the election of a legislature
which is to fill the seat in the United
States senate now held by a political
nondescript, George L. Wellington. A
more impudent and transparent at
tempt to hide the true questions at
issue between the two parties in Mary
land could not well be imagined; and
were it not for the desperate exigen
cies of the democratic organization,
which dares not advocate before the
people any single one of the demands
to which it is committed by the Kansas
City platform, the bugaboo put for
ward by last week's convention would
be laughed contemptuously out of
court by democratic as well as byre
publican opinion.
According to the census of 1900, the
negroes in Maryland constitute some
thing over -19 per cent, of the state's
population. Probably 50,000 negro
votes were polled for presidential
electors last November out of a total
of 264.511. Since then a new elec
tion law has gone into effect, ex
pressly designed by its framers to
limit negro suffrage, and, unless the
hopes and plans of the democratic
organization sadly miscarry, the ne
gro vote at the coming state election
should fall to less than 15 per cent, ol
the whole. To say that white su
premacy is endangered or appreciably
affected by the presence in the elec
torate of this small negro element is,
of course, flie sheerest absurdity. The
democratic party in Maryland has no
fear of the negro, and no intention ol
disfranchising him as such, and prob
ably no body of Marylanders would
be more reluctant to see the negro
excluded from the suffrage than the
democratic politicians themselves. As
always, however, they are willing ta
advocate a programme of buncombe
and humbug, especially when, as in
this instance, it serves as a cloak to
disguise an absolute poverty of gen
uine political ideas or issues. Find
ing nothing else left in the ransacked
wardrobe of Jeffersonianism,they try
to clothe themselves with the pre- i
tense that the 215,000 white voters of |
the state are to be overawed anc!
trampled on by the 40,000 or 45,000
negro voters. But in parading so
self-destructive a theory they only ad
vertise the fact that in Maryland,
even more than in Ohio, the demo
cratic party has become a party with
out a conscience and without an is
sue.—N. Y. Tribune.
PRESS OPINIONS.
tETThe men who are asking for
tariff reform are-free traders. What
they are aiming at is tariff destruc
tion rather than tariff revision.—
Cleveland Leader.
ICThe populists, democrats and
free silver republicans have had their
grand annual fusion in Nebraska
again, and the regular worry over the
problem of getting them to stay
fused until election time will now be
gin.—Chicago Record-llerald.
IT7 Advice to the steel workers'
leaders to recede from their unten
able position comes with poor
grace from newspapers that sup
ported Bryan and Bryanism without
whom and which there wotikl never
have been so many workingmen
brought to their present condition oi
unreasoning discontent. Albany
Journal.
C?" The Commoner says: "Another
week has passed and yet not a single
republican paper has seized the op
portunity to declare that the drought
is a result of Bryanism. The g. o. p.
organs are growing extremely care
less." Could anything be more child
ish or more like Bryan?—lowa State
Register.
CTSenator TTanna has disposed of
the rumor connecting his name with
efforts to settle the steel strike. He
says he has been asked by neither
side to participate in the attempt to
reach a settlement. There is no jus
tification for trying to drag this
strike into politics, but that is what
a good many politicians would like to
do. —Cleveland Plain Dealer.
A CENSUS BULLETIN.
It Show* that Ibr Dentil Hate 111 Tbla
Country l» UrrrfailiiK mid tl»at the
Average Duration of Life ID Im-reaa.
In If
Washington, Aug. 22.—The census
bureau yesterday announced the mor
tality statistics for the year 1900. W.
A. King, chief of the vital statistics
division, says:"The most important
feature of the results presented is
found in the decrease in the general
death rate of nearly 10 per cent., and
the decrease in the rates from the
particular d.seases to which the gen
eral decrease is due.
"The effect of the advances made in
medical science and sanitation and in
•the preventive and restrictive meas
ures enforced by the health authori
ties is still more strikingly shown in
the comparative rate for the regis
tration cities of the country. In
IS9O the death rate in'27l registration
cities of 5,000 or more population was
21 per 1,000; in 1900 the rate was 18.6
per 1,000 in 341 cities of 8,000 popula
tion and upward, a reduction of 2.4
per 1,000. The gross population of
these cities was 14,958,254 in 1890, and
21,81)0,631 in 1900.
"The entire significance of these
figures can be properly weighed only
when the rates for the individual
cities are considered in connection
with known conditions of local im
provement in sanitation and health
regulations.
"The average age at death in 1890
was 31.1 pears; in 1900 it was 35.2
years.
"The total number of deaths re
ported in 1900 was 1,039,094; in 1890
it was 841.419. The increase was
therefore 197,695, or 23.5 per cent. As
the percentage of increase in the
population was but 20.7, this indicates
a more complete return of deaths
than in 1890.
"The record of deaths upon which
these statistics are based was ob
tained from two different sources,
namely, the return by the enumera
tors of deaths reported to them at
the decennial enumeration, and the
registration record of deaths record
ed under local laws.
Portland, Ore., with a death rate
of 9.5 per thousand shows the lowest
mortality among the cities, and
Shreveport, La., wim 45.50 is the
highest.
In the registration area the 15 prin
cipal causes of death with the rate
per 100.000 was as follows:
Pneumonia 191.9, consumption 190.5,
heart disease 134.0, diarrheal diseases
85.1, kidney diseases 33.7, apoplexy
66.6 cancer 60, old age 54, bronchitis
48.3, cholera infantum 47.8, debility
45.5, inflammation of brain and men
ingitis 41.8, diphtheria 34.4. typhoid
fever 33.8 and premature birth 33.7.
Deaths from all the principal diseases
show a decrease since 1890, the most
notable being in consumption, which
decreased 54.9 per 100,000.
POTTER AND HARRIS.
State Ticket Nominated l»y Penti«yl»
vanla Republican*.
Harrisburg, Pa., Aug. 22.—The re
publican state convention, which met
here Wednesday and nominated
Judge William P. Potter, of Pitts
burg, for supreme court judge and
State Representative Frank C. Harris,
of Clearfield, for state treasurer, was
a most unusual gathering. The ticket
was nominated by acclamation. Sen
ators Quay and Penrose and other
party leaders were absent. There
was an unusually small attendance of
active party worksrs and a large ma
jority of the delegates never attend
ed a state convention before.
Judge Potter was formerly Gov.
Stone's law partner and was appoint
ed to the supreme bench last year to
succeed the late Judge Green. Mr.
Harris is serving his third term in the
house of representatives, and has al
ways been a follower of Senators
Quay and I'en rose. The platform on
which they were nonr~ated endorses
the national and state administra
tions and the official acts of Pennsyl
vania's senators, commends the leg
islature, concedes the right of labor
and capital to organize and denoun
ces "yellow jonrnalism."
A BATTLE IN A COURT ROOM.
Itil»«ln»ll>pi Parmer* Indulge lu a
Sbiiotin;' .Matinee —Three .Tien Fa
tally Wounded.
Water Valley, Miss., Aug. 22.—A
shooting affray occurred yesterday
at Reynolds, in Panola county, in
which four men were wounded, three
of them fatally.
Otto Johnson was being tried be
fore Justices Shelby and Warner on a
charge of seduction. The evidence
was all in and the justices had retired
to make up their verdict. More than
100 men were present in the room.
Suddenly a shot was fired, supposedly
by Otto Johnson. Instantly orher
shots were fired, fully half a hundred
in all, and when the smoke cleared
away Otto Johnson had three bullets
the body, Len Smith, who
testified against • Johnson, one
through the breast, J. W. Dawson one
through the breast and the father of
Len Smith one through the arm.
Eight or ten men had narrow escapes.
All the parties to the difficulty are
farmers.
Siiyn the t'ourta are Corrupt.
London, Aug. 22. —The Times pub
lishes a long article from a correspon
dent in Cuba, who highly praises the
progress of the island in material
welfare under the government of the
United States, but complains that the
courts of justice are sis corrupt as
under the Spanish regime and that
both the urban and rural police aire
inadequate and inefficient.
Knulneer Impaled on a Board.
Fort Dodge, la., Aug. 22.—Frank
Bender, an engineer on the Illinois
Central railroad, was impaled here
yesterday on a flying timber when
the cab of the engine failed to clear a
box car on the side track. A frag
ment of the moulding of the box car
four feet long and two inches in di
ameter, jagged with nails, was driv
en through the top of the cab and
through the left breast of the engi
neer just above the heart. Fully two
feet of the splinter stood out behind
his back. The splinter has been ex
tracted and there is a pcssibility of
his recovery.
MADE STRONG AND WELL
A Prominent Lady Raised From a Sick Bed by
Pe-ru-na—Entirely Cured in Two Weeks.
; MRS. E. A. CROZIER. *
1 «««»««»«■»» M«««« ».«-«-«-« « 4 * »
Mrs. E. A. Crozier, Senior Vice Presi
dent of the James Morgan Post, W. R.
C., 'the largest corps in Minnesota,
writes from"The Landour," 9th and
Nicollet, Minneapolis, Minn., as fol
lows:
•'Please accept hearty thanks on
behalf of Peruna, that wonderful med
icine which raised me from a sick bed
and made a strong and well woman of
me In two weeks. I suffered with
bearing-down pains, backache and con
tinual headache, and found no relief
an til / tried Peruna. It cured me com
pletely, and / feel as young and well
as when 18. I wish every woman
knew the merits of the medicine, and
no home would be without It."—Mrs.
E. A. Crozier.
1113
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■v I I ■ % I.Y CURE* PII..EM.
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BfamaW "A\ARtSH."TrID-
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AGENT WANTED
pell Tea at Irnporter's
PRICES. WRITE QCICLLY to ROME TEA
COUPA.VT, as Pearl Street, NEW YORK CITY.
I fc^^others
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_ Mrs. William Henderson, Bordulac,
N. C., writes:
"I was troubled with very serious fe
male weakness; had spells of flowing
that exhausted me so that I feared I
would lose my mind. I suffered untold
agony with my back, the pain extend
ing down my left leg. My pain was so
severe that I would have welcomed,
death at any moment—so no one need
wonder that 1 recommend Peruna so
highly, for it cured me entirely of that.
Not a sign of pain has returned, and
that will soon be two years now. ,
"I am glad that there is a way I cant
speak, trusting that many a sufferer
will read my testimonial, and not only
read but believe." —Mrs. Wm. Hender
son.
FOn WOMEN OXLY.
Free Treatment Darlngr Hot Wcatliei*
by Dr. Hitrtman,
By the assistance of an experienced
staff of physicians, Dr. Hartman pro
poses to direct the treatment of sev
eral thousand women, who, for on®
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Each patient sends name, symptoms,,
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tor's books as regular patients.
The treatment is directed from time
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lished except by the express wish of
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These cases are treated with th®
satne care and fidejity as the private
patients of a regular family physician.
During the past year a large number
of cases have been cured. Every item
of the treatment is directed for which;
no charge whatever is made.
Address Dr. Hartman, President of
The Hartman Sanitarium, Columbus,
Ohio, for free treatment.
SOZODOHT for the TEETH 25c
EDUCATIONAL.
HOPEDALE COLLEGE philosophical, scien
tiflc. normal, commercial, utid post-graduate couruMi
book* rented; K.K. fare free; 1160 a yr., and a plant*
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