Cameron County press. (Emporium, Cameron County, Pa.) 1866-1922, May 08, 1902, Page 2, Image 2

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    2
CAMERON COUNTY PRESS.
H. H. MULLIN, Editor.
Published Every Thursday.
TERMS OF SUBSCRIPTION.
r'or year. J2 oo
112 paid in advance 1 bO
ADVERTISING RATES:
Advert'sements arc published at the rate oi
•uo debar per square for one Insertion and tlftj
•ents rer square for each subsequent insertion
Rates t>y ilie year, or for six or three months,
lit low ai d uniform, and will be furnished on
ap licat.ou.
Leßiil and Official Advertising per square,
three limes or less, I'.': each subsequent lnssr
l.o i 0 rents per square.
Local notices to cents per line for one inser
•trilnn: f> cents per line for each subsequent
c>m-ccutive Insertion.
Obituary notices over five lines 10 cents pel
line. Simple announcements of births, uiar
riat'es and deaths will be inserted free.
Business cards, five lln«\s or less. 15 per year;
overlive lin<s, at the rt-gulur rates of adver
tising.
No local Inserted for less than 75 cents pr.i
Issue.
JOB PRINTING.
The .Job department of the PKKSS Is complete
• ■ i*. air. r«l- facilities for doing the best class of
m rU. PAUIKI I.Alt AT'I'EN 1 ION PAIDTO LAW
K*KINTINU.
No paper will bo discontinued until arrear
re s are paid, except at the cjtion of the pub
u>her.
Papers sent out of the county must be paid
Icr in advaace.
>'ot lonj? ago it was thought that
the public schools did all that they
should when they
TraiuiiiK
provided instruc
lltinie-Mnken. ljon jn .. tlle t) , ree
K's;" but the increase in population
and its congestion in the cities have
created new problems which the school
authorities have attempted to solve
by expanding the course of study.
High schools in which Latin, Greek and
the sciences are taught can lie found
in every considerable town, and man
ual training schools and commercial
high schools or business collegt s are
not uncommon. Still further, schools
in which instruction is given in the
housewifely arts of cooking and sew
ing are growing more numerous. In
tleed, in one of the large cities 72,000
girls and young women are learning
in the public schools how to make
dresses for themselves and their sis
let's, and coats anil knickerbockers for
their little brothers. There was a time
when every girl was taught to sew at
home, but in tiie crowded districts of
the larger cities the mother who lias
togo out scrubbing or house-cleaning
all day has little time or strength left
to teach her children how to make
dresses, even if she knows herself.
Moreover, the sewing machine has
wrought such a revolution that hand
sewing is in danger of becoming a lost
art. So the school authorities, respon
sible for the training of the young,
and especially of the young Jn hum
ble life, says tiie Youth's Companion,
have largely abandoned any preju
dices which they may have had in fa
vor of the old-fashioned school, and
are trying to meet tlie problem with
which they are confronted. The pur
pose of the schools remain unchanged;
but it has been found that there are
things which the children need to
I<now as much as they need to be able
to read and cipher, and they are taught
these tilings. So democratic is the
public school system that the instiuc
tiop intended primarily for the chil
dren of the very poor is enjoyed by
the children from homes where the
mother has time and ability to train
ber daughters in the arts of the house
wife.
Ella Wheeler Wilcox writes to the
New York Sun asking that attention
be directed to her
'l'lie Authorship
standing offer of
of n < onplet. $3,000 to be given to
e charity of her own selection for any
authenticated copy of a newspaper or
magazine, of date prior to February,
])sh3, containing her verses on "Soli
tude." Tliis is the poem which Col.
John A. Joyce claims contains his coup
let :
Laugh, and the world laughs with you—
Weep, and you weep alone.
Somebody, it seems, has recently
credited the lilies to the colonel, and
Klla Wheeler Wilcox is again provoked
into denying his title to them. But it
really does not matter, since, whether
Col. Joyce or Mrs. Wilcox wrote them,
they do not tell the exact truth. This
world does not always laugh with you,
as everybody knows. Very often, ob
serves the Chicago Inter Ocean, it
laughs at you. And it depends alto
gether on circumstances whether you
weep alone. Mrs. Wilcox would lose
nothing by letting the colonel claim
the couplet, if lie really wants it.
There is a science in acquiring a fund
of anecdotes for lectures and after
dinner speech e s
< lu«ini«M*y
which few persons
.....1 111. take thetrollbleto
think about. An orator of nation.-*!
reputation does not dare to repeat his
stories and anecdotes too often. He
must always have a large assortment
•in hand applicable to every occasion.
The method of Mr. Depew in sur
mounting this difficulty is a thorough
and original one. According to an in
timate friend of the orator's, he has
a elerk who files away all the best
stories which the famous orator lias
been using for tiie last quarter of a
century. Mr. Depew himself, with his
observant, eyes and world-wide circle
of acquaintances, is constantfy adding
to this fund. Each of thete stories is
classified and then indexed, «<> as to be
accessible at any time and for any oc
casion. Whenever Mr. Depew uses one
of these stories the time and place are
noted to save himself the embarrass
ment of repeating the same story to
<lie itame audience.
BRUTALITY CHARGED.
Itnntur He ve rlrijte'* \ Ikomiik Ilc
(fimr of American £ol«ll«'r* in
tin- I'll ili iH'i no.
At tin- Indiana republican state
convention, Indianapolis, April 2:i,
Senator Beveridge, chairman of the
convention, in a lengthy address upon
the various politieal questions now
before the people touched n|>< >ll the
subject <>f charges made against
American soldiers in the Philippines
of brutalities towards the natives. In
defense of the soldiers the senator
said:
j "Do they tell us of the brutality of Amer
ican soldiers? War has no record of mercy,
tt ndt rness and care that compares with
the Am.rican treatment of prisoners In the
Philippines. Gens. Otis, Hughes aj.d Mae-
Arthur havi- testified to the care and klnd
| ness of American officers and men to
Filipino prisoners. They are cart d for even
as our own. 1 have si en wards of our own
hospitals turned over to Filipino sick and
wounded. Ami Hcan physicians' attend
thim, American nurses minister to them.
We are told of reconcentration camps.
And what, are they.' Great tracts of fi-rtlle
land, not surrounded by fences and stock
ades, where the people may live and work
in perfect liberty protected from murder
ous desperados' demands. Read the story
of American reconcentration In Marln
duquc. The Filipinos there were fed with
food bought by American money. When
those who terrorized them had been killed
or captured, Filipino physicians signed vol
untary statements tli.it tin- people's health
within those American lin»s was 50 pel
cent. better than it had been in their own
homes. And those people departid to their
Held, at last made peaceful, with rejoicings
011 their lips that Lhey had finally been res
cued from their own oppressors, and with
blessings on the Ann riean Hag and the
American soldiers who had worked that
deliverance.
"The republican party stands by the
American soldier in the Philippines to-day
as It stood by the soldier of the uion 4>>
years ago, stands b> him now, and will
stand by him until the last gray and hon
ored head bows to the Conqueror of us all.
To those who now denounce American sol
diers the Annrican people will givi- the
same answer they gave to the defamt r.s
of the boys in blue in the old days: 'We
stand by the boys beneath the Hag.'
"The boys beneath thi (lag! God bless
them everyone! And God defend them
from enemies at hoim- and abroad, foes in
the field and foes In the rear. Foes In the
Held, the American soldier lights and con
quers; foes in the rear he cannot reach.
Think of men rejoicing when American sol
dii rs 112 ill! Art- there such men In America
to-day? Ask yourselves who would be
helped in the coming campaign by the new -
of American disaster? American officers
will nil you thai insurrection has been
prolonged by American encouragement.
American soldiers are lighting for the
llag's supremacy, for the republic's ad
vancing powi r; and there is no nobler cauie
lor which to battle and to die than to plant
American might and righteousness where
duty points the way.
"This Is r.o season for bitterness. It is a
time for loyalty, love and brotherhood in
all American hearts. Sections are no more;
they have passed away in the progress of
the great depublic. The twentieth century
opens with the mightiest people of history
marching onward to supremacy, with
"Fraternity" as their watchword. We will
not denounc • even tin mallgners 'if Ami r-
Ican soldiers; we pity them instead, for
thi y know not what they do. Our gri-ati t
leader's loftiest words is our motto still:
"Malice toward none, charity for all:" loy
alty to the flag! I'pon the grave of every
American soldier, wherever he yielded up
his life, let thi graft fill teal's of the nation
fall. And for the cause for which Amer
ican soldiers have given their blood let
the whole world know that the American
people are united. Let watching rations
learn that this new world power rising in
the west Is not divided by classes, riven
by strife, weakened by faction, and that
those who stand against our advancii
banner must meet a single, devoted, united
people following after, l.tt history record
that we are It: fact, as well as nann . the
people of the United States of America."
DRIFT OF OPINION.
Tiie Nashville American proposes
David I!. Hill anil Fit/.hugh Lee it-- tiie
democratic national ticket for 1904.1
Hits Bryan been entirely forgotten'.'—
lowa Stilte Register.
Kv*('ol. Bryan threatens to carry ilie
silver question into Cuba. That is ;
much further than he penetrated with
liis silver regiinejit during tiie Spanish
war. —St. Louis Globe-Democrat.
democrats are about to i
"frame a policy" for the campaign of j
1!(04. if they do not like it when '
framed, of course they will, as usual, j
112 rnnie a not her.- ( hicago 1 liter Ocean.
t7"i'he only hope of democrats every
where seem to have of winning this
year is on "republican mistakes."
There appears to be very little in
itiative in that party nowadays.—Al - !
bany Journal.
t-'Tiie Cuban tariff concession men
thought it fun to have democrat ic co
operation until tliey struck Ilie differ
ential. There is no limit to tariff tin
kering when once allowed to begin.—
St. Louis Globe-Democrat.
ICCoI. Watterson sees democrats
rapturously uniting all over the coun
try. This fills him with unalloyed joy.
I'.ut he does not say anything nlnyit
Mr. Gorman, Mr. Bryan or Mr. Hill.
Are they also uniting for peaee and
harmony?— Albany Journal.
If The Oregon election is the first to
take place this year. It occurs in June
antl the republicans are confident of
polling a large vote. At one time the
early state elections were regarded as
certain indicators of how the general
elections would go in the fall, and per
haps the election in Oregon will serve
that purpose now. Albany Journal.
If Heal Americans, regardless of par
ty, will be gratified to learn that the
republican members of the senate Phil
ippines committee have rejected the
proposition of Mr. Tfaw lins to tiring
Aguinaldo and other Filipino leaders
here as being more truthful than such
officers as Gens. Merritt, Anderson,
Otis and Mac Arthur. and Admiral
Dewey and such civilians as the men
comprising the two Philippine commis
sions.— Indianapolis Journal.
If Henry Watterson and David B.
Ilill are trying to get the democratic
party together on a Jcffersonian plat
form. Watterson is an expansionist
and Hill is a eont ract ionist. The lat
ter hold* the record for eont ract ing re
publican majorities through the agen
cy of a democratic state canvassing
board from which Dutches*county re
turns were conveniently stolen. Of
Course he would be a shining apostle
of "no government without the con
sent of the governed."—Troy (X. Y.)
Times.
CAMERON COUNTY PRESS, THURSDAY, MAY 8, 1902.
ONE ONLY REMEDY.
Homo Competition In tlii k Sole Solu
tion of tin* t'uliaii SiiKur
I'roll 11' in.
The democratic papers ami their
"independent" and "reform" organs
ar« milking a great shout over the.
passage of tlie Cuban reciprocity
measures through Die house, lieeanse
that aetiou may lead to repuhlieau
division and defeat; hut what will be
the result, if that liill heeonies a law,
so far as the consumers of sugar are
concerned? .Nothing-. TJ.e sugar
trust will eontinue to purchase all the
foreign sugar imported into the
I'nited States and make the priees at
which sugar shall he sold, just as il
has ever since Hawaii was annexed.
It is true that the sugar tru.st m?y
make reductions in prices in the re
gions where sugar is produced in the
I'nited States, hut lio one will expect
reductions iu localities where there is
110 competition with the trust, says
the lowa State Register.
The ollicial report shows (hat 9fc5,-
568,0-10 pounds of sugar were pro
duced in the I'nited States last year,
| which was ahout one-sixth of the
."i,31.'i.!)K7,H40 pounds consumed in this
Country during the year. One-third
of the home production was from su
gar beets ami two-thirds from cane.
| Nn one will attempt to deny the fact
I that sugar was cheaper because of
[the home production. Protecting
> home labor and building up home in
dustries are tin- main objects of the
| republican tariff. Thai is why the
free trade democrats, "independents"
and "reformers" are now joining in
great rejoicing over the passage of
the Cuban reciprocity bill in the
house. It is possible that if that bill
becomes a law it will destroy the SII
-1 gar cane industry of the south and
the sugar beet industry of the north,
and thus destroy all the existing
competition with the sugar trust.
What then will he the result?
The people of the. United Stntes
have had notable lessons in the steel
rail and tin industries of their own
country. It is only 12 years since
the free trades were insisting that
"tinplate cannot be made in the
I'nited States;" it is only about a
quarter of a century since they were
asserting that steel rails could not be
made in this country; ami they are
now insisting that the United States
cannot produce its own sugar supply,
notwithstanding sugar can be pro
duced on about two-thirds of the til
lable land of this country. Home
competition is the only remedy. The
price of sugar may be temporarily
reduced because of the large world
production last year, but the destruc
tion of the American sugar indus
tries w ill he certain to result in high
er priced sugar, and free trade on su
gar would not be of the slightest in
jury to the sugar trust, simply be
cause that trust buys the foreign sti- '
gar and makes the price at which it :
shall be sold just as the coffee trust
buys the coffee and makes the prices
at which it shall be sold, not with- i
standing there is 110 duty 011 coffees
imported into the United States.
HUNTING FOR AN ISSUE.
|}<* 111 ot* 1*111>» \ r«» to S«• 112 i |» a
Hiii' HIMI Cry \ limit \n>
Old Til iil if,
With a great clatter democrat! • ,
politicians have begun to denounce a
"force bill" because a bill has bet : 1
introduced iu the house to investigate
the suffrage situation in the stati - j
that have adopted disfranchising eon- '
stitutions. This sudden eruption oi
democratic noise about a possible s< - |
called force bill is as vociferous as if
the dreadful measure were already
framed and Hearing a vote. .lust two ,
things have been suggested iu con
gress in connection with general suf- 1
l'rage. One is a bill to give federal
courts a certain jurisdiction in tpies- 1
tions relating to the election of fed- i
era 1 (not state or local) officers. The
other is simply a bill to investigate
suffrage as affected by state constitu
tions adopted in recent years. Judg- j
ing from the violent democratic out- I
cry it is a crime for congress even to
investigate national questions of suf
frage or to exercise any restraint on ■
the fraudulent election of its own I
members, says the St. Louis (ilohe-
Democrat.
This feverish outbreak about an ;
imaginary force bill shows how hard j
run the democratic party is for an is
sue of any kind. Many of its leaders j
pretend they are ready to appeal to
the country on a plank advocating ,
the surrender of the Philippines, but !
they have no real appetite for a ques
tion practically decided in the elec
tion of 1900. Xo lighting ground pre
sents itself in financial matters.
Prosperity abides with the |Vople.
Free trade is neither new nor good as
a rallying point. So ihe democratic
Micawbers are splitting their lungs
over the "force bill" they fancy they
see somewhere behind the horizon.
Any shadow of an issue is welcome
to the party unable to discover any
thing of real consequence to putin
its next platform. Mr. Cleveland
calls Mr. ltryau "an afflictive visita
tion," and Mr. llryan says Mr. Cleve
land's administration was "odious
and odorous." Meanwhile, the re
publicans represent the right side of
all essential issues anil are amused
by the democratic clamor about ques
tions as yet unborn.
CLondon is also complaining of the
high price of meat. Let us see. Have
not our free trade friends repeatedly
asserted that it is the tariff alone
which makes possible the formation of
trusts and the exaction of excessive
rates for food products? Is there,
then, a meat trust in free trade—or
partly free trade—England? Troy
Times.
AWFUL DISASTER.
Eight Girls and Women Are
Dead and Many Huit.
Accident to tlir Janitor ol a IMilladrN
I>bl<t Clear .Tlanulactury CuiiNrai a
Cry of Fire to llr Halm-d,
Wlilcli itesulted In Paul«
Aiuoiitf Employe*.
Philadelphia, May 1. —An unfortu
nate accident to a deaf and dumb
boy, Isador liaeeus, w as yesterday di
rectly responsible for the death of
eight young girls and woman, the fa
tal injury of three and the serious
injury of more than 20 girls em
ployed in the cigar factory of llar-
I burger, Hotnan <fc Co., a branch of
| the American Tobacco Co., located at
| Tenth street and Washington avenue.
The building in which the disaster
i occurred is a live-story brick struc
ture and reaches an entire block.
Twelve hundred persons were at work
1 at the time of the accident, 90 per
] cent, of whom were girls whose ages
; range from 12 years upward.
The trouble began on the fourth
floor of the structure. Baccus, the
janitor of the building, started for
the fifth floor. The elevator was at
tin; top of the shaft and liaeeus
pulled the rope to bring it down. He
opened the door leading to the shaft
and leaned forward to see where the
carriage was. As he did so the ele
! vator. which was descending slowly,
j struck him across the back of the
neck, pinioning his head between the
elevator and the floor. A stock boy
I released liaeeus and cried for help.
J The foreman rushed from the build
! ing to call an ambulance and imme
diately there was a panic among the
j employes.
Some of the younger girls fainted,
j while others, not being able to con
trol their feelings, cried fire. In
etantly there was a mad rush for the
! stairway leading into Tenth street.
The girls rushed down the narrow
| staircase until they reached a bend
j in the exit between the second and
j third -floors. In their eagerness to
: escape the frightened leaders fell.
Others immediately following tripped
! over the stumbling mass of huuiani
j ty and in less than a minute there
were hundreds of children and young
! women struggling in the passageway,
j The shrieks and screams of the tcr
; ror-strieken girls could be heard for
; a block or more.
During the excitement an alarm of
i fire was turned in, but before the en
| yines could reach the scene several
of the occupants of the building had
rushed to the windows and jumped to
the street, a distance of over 50 feet.
Helen Totini, one of those to jump,
was almost instantly killed. When
the firemen and policemen arrived
every effort was made to quiet the
terrorized girls.
After a few minutes the men were
enabled to check the awful crush on
the stairway and then began the |
work of rescuing those who had been
trampled and crushed between the !
second and third floors. A call for
ambulances had been turned in and j
as quickly as tiie dead and injured
were carried from the building, they J
were hurried to hospitals.
'While this was going on the scene j
about the structure was heartrend-!
ing. Parents and relatives of the un- ;
fortunate girls were screaming j.nd
rushing about tlie streets like mad
and it was almost impossible for the
police otlieials to restrain the moth
ers and relatives of supposed victims
from entering the building.
The panic was over in less than an j
hour.
Will luveMtigate the ( ate,
Denver, May 1. Judge bindsey, of
the county court, yesterday an
nounced that he will officially investi
gate a rumor that William Wood, sup
posed to have died a year ago in a
Kansas insane asylum, is alive and re
covering his reason through expert
treatment in Europe. Wood was one i
of the heirs of a large estate, which
included the famous Kmmu mine at
Aspen, Col., once valued at $10,000,000.
His estate at present is valued at
about $1,000,000. His heirship was
established after many years of liti
gation, which reached the supreme
court of the United States. In the
meantime he had been pronounced
hopelessly insane and later was re
ported to have died.
I.onu: Out, Woody 111.
'Washington, May 1. —'Secretary
Long closed his official career as tjie
head of the naval establishment yes
terday. Affairs progressed as usual
and the event was unmarked save bj
the calling of many friends to take
official leave of the retiring secretary.
Among the callers were Secretary
Hay and Mr. Moody, Secretary Long's
successor. Secretary Moody assumed
the duties of secretary of the navy
this morning. Very few changes will
follow the change in the head of the
department. The only one which will
take effect at once will be the in
stallation of Fred L. Fishback as con
fidential clerk in place of Mr. Greer,
who has been appointed an assistant
paymaster in the navy.
Siruro Lynched.
IBrandenburg, Kan., May 1. —Ernest
Dewley, a negro, who shot and seri
ously wounded Harry Dowell, a
young white man at Guston, about
seven miles from this place, was
hanged by a mob 'Wednesday morn
ing and his body riddled with bullets.
■tl€ln*t lli'loni: to IteeT Trust, Kitlii-r.
Omaha, Xeb., May I.—The highest
prices ever paid for thoroughbred cat
tle at the South Omaha stock yards
was bid for a herd of Angus-Aber
deens sold yesterday. The six-year
old cow, Blackbird, was sold to Can
ton Bros. & Stevenson, of Holstein,
la., for $3,010, and a calf at her sidt'
brought SI,OOO. Forty-four head
brought an average of $234.
War Ha* Coxt Over a Million Hollars.
London, May I.—An official esti
mate of the. total coat of the South
African war to March 31, 1903, placan
the amount at nearly £223,000,000.
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(||TIP|I|HI Hoalop, unci soften the thickened cuticle; CUTICURA OINTMENT (50c.),
to instantly allay itching, inflammation, and irritation, and sootho
and heal; and CUTICUHA RESOLVENT PILLS (26C.), to cool and cleanse
THE SET Si. t * le blood. -A SINOLE BET is often sufficient to cure the isost torturing,
disfiguring, itching, burning, and scaly skin, scalp, and blood humours,
rashe*, itchings, a»*d irritations, with ions of hair, when ail else fails. Sold throughout tho
world. liritish Depot: 27-28, Charterhouse Bq., London. French Depot: 6 Ituo de la Pais,
Paris. POTTER DKUU AND CREM. COIIP., bole Props., Boston, U. 8. A. 44 Ail about tho Skin/*
free.
CUTICURA RESOLVENT PILLS (Chocolate Coated, arc a new, tasteless, odourless, economical
subntitute for the celebrated liquid CUTICUHA UESOLVENT, as well as for all other blood purifier®
and humour cures. Each pill is equivalent to one teaspoonful of liquid RESOLVENT. Put up in
screw-cap pocket vials, containing the same number of doses ss a 60c. bottle of liquid RE
SOLVENT, price 25c. CUTICURA PILLS are alterative, antiseptic, tonic, and digestive, and beyond
question the purest, sweetest, most successful and economical blood and skin puriliers,
euros, and tomc-digosUY«s jet compounded.
JDSIIMOFII]
I l» I .Increasing year by year,
I rt |l J la&d vnlr.c Increasing,
slock inereasing. splen-
I EkTlgtJ ri did climate, excellent
ww /a it schools and churches. low
taxation.^ high prices for
... , way rates, and every
possible comfort. This Is the condition of tb*
."Canada Province of Manitoba
»rl s Assinibola, Haskatchcwnn arid
i»« . !f an ° •An j, *ricanN are now settled
I! 1l , U( 'VJ I I ra, *« on all rail wars for iiouie
! seekers and settlers. Sew districts are being opened
lion
WIHAZARPI
(irand Amei i'-an
Anril 1902. Hlr«hv ■
killed 102 live itlrdi without H
straight to win the main ■
event. lie used Ha/anl ■
Smokeless. Olathe Ku . ■
April 9th and 10th, IW»2. Hazard Smokeier* won B
the Kan*a* State (lying target championship— H
6»o«t of 60 also tlie Rochester Cup w straight H
J. A. It. Elliott holds the live bird championship ■
of America with Hazard Smokeless Powder. Use H
Hazard Smokeless, the recognized powder of the H
day. I'attern you r gun with it. Send for targets H
U* llarard Smokeless Target, P. O. Box 60a, New B
GUM POWDER!
j WHE.V WBITIMO TO AH>VRKTfߣJK
plcaae *tat<> Unit you suw tbc Advertlae-
I meet in tlita paper.