2 CAMERON COUNTY PRESS. H. H. MULLIN, Editor. Published Every Thursday. TERMS OF SUBSCRIPTION. Per year It p»id In advance 1 ADVERTISING RATES: Advertisements are published at the rate oi one dollar per square forone insertion and llfty cents i er square for each subsequent insertion. Rates by the year, or for si* or three month*, ■re low and uniform, and will be furnished on application. Lenul and Official Advertising per square, tbreo times or less, each subsequent Inser tion 50 cents per square. Local notices t» cents per line for one tnser lertion; ft cents per line for each subsequent consecutive insertion. Obituary notices over five lines. 10 cents per line. Simple announcements of births, mar riages and deaths will be inserted free. Business cards, five lines or less, *5 per year: over live lines, at the regular rates of adver tising ' .... No local Inserted for less than 75 cents pei Issue. JOB PRINTING. The Job department of the Prkss Is complete and affords facilities for doing the best class of work. Pabiicuiab attention paid ro 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 lor in advance. ~ The coal strike, with all the ex pensc, inconvenience and suffering which it.has caused Seeing the has afforded an- Fanny Side. ... ... . other illustration of the general good nature of the Amer ican people, and their willingness to find something amusing even in their ovv n inconvenience. I f one could gather, observes the Youth's Companion, all the humorous paragraphs which the newspapers have printed in regard to the price of coal, hew ould have mate rial enough for a book, and n clever and amusing book it would be. .Nor is ihe editor by any means the only one who has had his little joke. The jeweler displays on a piece of cotton batting in his window a piece of coal the size of his thumb-nail, with the legend: "Cenuine, old-mine anthracite coal from Pennsylvania. Not for sale." The grocer packs'an egg-crate with I'ie ces of coal and puts it on view with the innocent sign: "Forty cents a dozen." The safe dealer labels his goods: "IJurglar proof coal-bins." This habit -if laughing at discomforts and making a joke of adversity is no new trait In American character. It ap peared during the Spanish-American war. when men charged joyously to the air of "There'll Me a Hot Time in Ihe Old Town To-Night." It showed itself in humorous songs sung in Libby pri.-on and practical jokes perpetrated in Andersonville. It cropped out in that sout hern ca valryjnan w ho w as of fered $5,000 in confederate currency for his horse, and replied with a grin that he had just paid SIO,OOO to have liim shod. Ability to brush aside care, and even danger, with a laugh, so far from being an indication of weakness or irresponsibility, is rather a sign of strength, and decidedly a source of strength. Lincoln, most typical of Americans, was typical in this. His jokes are history- as well as literature, yet many of them were born of circum stances which, to a man who lacked t he saving salt of humor, would have been tragic. The bon mot of Lord Beaconefield that it is the unexpected that happens The I nexpeptcd coiistantly .. , verified in txperi -11 al> |ie n i in- h. 1 ence that stuns people apparently seek to break the spell of the unexpected by constantly looking for it. When any new situa tion arises they set their wits to im agining how the most unfortunatecir- cumstances could take place, and the amount of anxiety and fore bod ing t he v inflict on themselves in anticipating the disagreeable is almost as nerve wearing as the actual happening < 112 the unfortunate things thev antici pate. 11 ii t why should we so invari ably identify thes "unexpected" with the disagreeable? The lioston Watch man. speaking of this, observes that as a matter of fact the surprises of life are by no means always unwelcome. Some of the best things that ever be fell us came in the chapter of acci dents-—a pure windfall. We were im agining the worst and the best came. In view of this-, is it not wise to let the anticipated evil and the pood bal ance each other, and keep the imagin ation from forecasting too much? Cer tainly, there is about as much reason for anticipat iiig good accidents as evil ones; and the man who believes that the chapter of the unexpected may run in his favor is by far the happier. The head of the United States treas ury department, Secretary Shaw, has issued a timely w a ruing t hat gambling. l>y poker games or otherwise, will lie regarded as proving unfitness for the service of the government. Several clerks in responsible positions have been reduced in grade and salary be caiis> they were known to play poker, and it is plainly made known that those who continue to risk mone\ in belting on races and games of chance Will be dismissed. An interesting experiment was made recent ly. says t he Philadelphia Medical Journal. A pint of various fruits was picked al random from one stand, washed, and tin' washings analv/ed. i rum this pint of fruit 140.000,000 germs wire secured. It would be hard to have to liv e where the pesky things Were as thick as that. A GREAT PRESIDENT. Koo«evt It Hit* Proven lliiu*elf (au lioua 'nil ( on«rn iilivc, Patieut uuil Steudfukt. Those who have imagined Theodore Kuosevelt t playing havoc with somt from Germany to the I'nited 1 State- during the last f|tiarter were $31.">27.!i:.'3. an increase of $7,107,! "i 3 ] over the proioii l - quarter. What hn» ! become of that free trade ci ntertion to the effect that protection prevents ! u> from buying from or -elling to j Other nationsV—Troy Times. CAMERON COUNTY PRESS, THURSDAY, OCTOBER 30, 1902. DON'T FORGET ISO 2, Democrats Striving to I,em! fit; Peo« pie Into n Repetition of (lie (irlt'V" ou » Ml»t ak eof Tli a t Year. Exactly ten years ago the majority of the people of ihe United States was being misled into the disastrous blun der whose results were for four years thereafter a source of constant and deep regret to thousands of honest voters who had permitted specious misrepresentations- temporarily to overcome their intelligence and good judgment. llelieving that memory is short enough already to h»ve left behind the bitter experience of those years, the democratic party is seeking to mislead the people into a repetition of their grievous mistake of a decade ago, says the Albany Journal. Then the cry was that ''the tariff is a tax." Now it is, that the tariff is the "mother of trusts." Then the specious argument was that the equivalent of the respective import duties was ad ded to the prices of the commodities upon which duti< s were imposed. Now it is that Ihe ta riff is enabling the great industrial combinations to exist, that they are oppressing and robbing the people—the statement is made gener al: specific instances are never cited— and that therefore the combinations should lie destroyed through abolition of the tariff. It is in order at this time, when an other attack upon the protective sys tem is being made, for every American citizen to think back to the tine when the Wilson law had removed part of the tariff that had been falsely de nounced as a tax. Commodities be* ] came cheaper, but the people had no ! money to buy, market values fell still i lower. No profits remained for pro ' dueers, wages had tobe reduced, hour* ; of labor shortened, t housa nd s of work | men had to lie discharged, mills and | factories and furnaces and workshops j became empty, and from the midst of industrial and commercial stagnation low prices mocked the masses who could not obtain the money with which to make purchases. Hut one need not dwell on a descrip tion <>f those conditions. Mere refer ence to them will revive their memory vividly in all minds. In ISOli the repub lican party was welcomed back to pow er with open arms-with rejoicing and with t he confidence that it would bring back prosperity. To do that- was not an easy task. In any other country it | would have been a task of years. Hut the splendid recuperative power of this nation came into play, and the re institution of republican policies quickly had gratifying effect. Pros perity returned; it has abided with us. and grown, and is still growing. I n 11)00, the represent a fives of the re pub) 'can party in national convention assembled made this declarat i< n: "We rer.ew our faith In the policy of pro tection to American labor. In that policy our Industries have been established, di versified ar.d maintained. Hy protecting the home market competition has been stim ulated ar.d production cheap ned. Oppor tunity to the inventive Renins of our peo ple has hen secured and way.■ > in every I dejUrtment of labor maintained' at high r a s. higlii r than ever before, ar.d always . distinguishing our working people In their | better condition* of life front thos* of any ; competing country. Kr jnylrg the b:, --Inge of th? American common school. < cure In the tiitlit of self-government and protected l ir. the occupancy of their own markets, their constantly increasing knowledge ar.d skill turn rt. ihledi them to finally enter the markets of tin- world. V.'c favor the ns ! s elati d policy of reciprocity directed as to i pen our m irkets on fa\ arable term for what we do not ourselves produce, 1». return for free foreign m rkt!iiu;:in! i.f li.inir. American tvan | hood and American homes are hut the j sequences of a protective tariff which j brought to us and will continue to give ! us an unprecedented age if luxury, an unparalleled era of pre -peritv." rr-'The national debt is now below the thousand million |>• int. thestate ment of September oil giving it. less : cash in ti.e treasury, a - 7,-i 1 "i.sst July 1. Ic<>»;.1 c <>»;. if tvas 8."751.2:i0.K3. Near ly nil < 112 the reduction lias been made by reptfblicnn administrations.—ln i eianapolis Journal. r M tiator Iliinnn mat e -liort work "X free trade ns a remedy for trusts j in hi.- Marietta "I have no : patience to discus- free trade as u : renin y for trust.-. It i- perfect rot.'' —Des Mohici Kcgister. liUKXED TO DEATH. Twelve Men Lose Their Lives in a Chicago Fire. I'lnmeN Spread Itapldly— Jumped from Seventh Story of Itui-nlti<: Sugar Kelliiery and Were Hushed to Oeatli l'lre Ca lined by ICxploMon. Chicago, Oct. 22.—T5y a fire which broke out shortly before midnight in the plant of the glucose sugar re finery, situated at Taylor street and the Chicago river, that factory was almost entirely destroyed, and it is said that 21) men lost their lives. The flames spread so rapidly that a man who was working on the third floor had barely time to escape with his life, and it is not thought by the employes of the concern or by the firemen that the men in the upper story could have avoided death. The plant of the refining company consisted of three buildings, the dry ing house, seven stories in height; tiie main refinery, 14 stories high, and another structure of four stories. The tire started in the drying house, being caused by an explosion. The flames spread with almost incredible rapidity, and by the time the first of the fire department had arrived the building was ablaze from foundation to roof. ]t was impossible for the firemen to make; any effective fight against the flames, and in a short time all the walls were down, The fire was so hot that at one time it was feared that the Taylor street viaduct, across which access is had to the South Side, would be destroyed, but the firemen managed to save this after a hard struggle. They bent every effort toward saving the 14- story building of the refinery, but so intense was the fire in the drying house that this caught fire lu sev eral places, and at 12:30 a. M.it was evident that it could not be saved. The men employed in the three low er floors of the drying house ran for the doors and windows as soon as they had knowledge of the fire, and all of them succeeded in reaching the open air. The men on the seventh floor had no chance whatever for their lives. Several of them left the windows and crawled along the sills in an effort to reach a place of safety, but with the exception of two men all those who attempted to reach safety in this way made up their minds that it was certain death and went back into the burning building. The two men, how ever. determined to take the chances of a leap, and climbing up on the window ledge they sprang out into the air. One of them came straight down for the greater part of the way, but just after he was within a short dis tance of trie pavement, his body swung around, and he struck the stone walk at full length. The other man turned over and over as lie came whirling down. Their bodies were hor ribly crushed. Four other men jumped from win flows on the fourth floor. These men were terrioly injured. Chicago, Oct. 23. —Four of the five bodies taken to the morgue from the fire in the plant of the Glucose Sugar Itcfiuing Co. Tuesday night have been identified. They are: Otto Trapp, ICdvvard Steinke, An drew Woselka, Joseph Harry. It is almost certain that several more bodies are lying in the ruins, but the heat of the debris has pre vented firemen from making any search and the exact number is not' known. A switchman declares that he saw four men slide down a water pipe, and it is known that one man jumped into the river and made his escape. This diminishes the list to 12, RAILROAD ACCIDENTS. Store than Person* Were Killed and :tll,HOtl Injured In Thin Country lltirliiu One Vritr. Washington, Oct. 22. The number of persons killed in train accidents during the months of April, May and June last, as shown by a bulletin is sued yesterday by the inter-state commerce commission, giving the reports made by the railroad com panies, was no, and the injured 1,810. Accidents of other kinds, including those sustained by employes while at work and b.v passengers getting on or off ears, etc., swells the aggregate to 610 killed and, 0,520 injurd, or a total of 10,136 casualties. The total number of collisions and derailments was 2.01(1, of which 1.094 were collisions. Of these 157 cobl sions and lot derailments affected passenger trains. The damage result ing to cars, engines and roadway by these accidents aggregated <1,813,833 Ihe average loss by each collision was approximately $824 and by each derailment $095. The total casualties during the fiscal year ended June 110 last, includ ing the above figures, was 2.-13 killed and 30.500 injured. The number of employes killed showed a diminution of OS per cent, since 1893, when the safety appliance act was passed, and this decrease has occurred notwith standing the much larger number of men em ployed. I2'ink Robbed of £6,000. St. Paul, Minn., Oct. 22.—A special to the Dispatch places the loss in the Summit, S. 1)., bank robbery of Sim day night al $6,000. No clew to Ihe robbers has been found. Nfolo II .^3II I*4'll oil V|«»k«£U!J. London, Oct. 22.—A dramatic devel opment in the tight for the control of London's "tube" railroads occurred Tuesday when it transpired that Speyer Hros., who are finnncing Charles T. Verkes* plans, had bought control of a" - large company hitherto allied with fli•» Morgan scheme of transportation, thereby not only re ducing the scope of the Morgan pro jected line by many miles, but actual ly threatening it with legal oblitera tion. The latest move in I his Mor gan-Yerkes rivalry was announced at a session of the house of commons "tubes" committee. CONGRESSMAN WILBER SAYS [To The Pc-ru-na Medicine Co., of Columbus, o.] u Pe=ru=rsa is All You Claim For It." Congressman I). F. Wilber, of Oneonta, N. Y., writes: The Pcruna Medicine Co., Columbus, Ohio: Gentlemen—*' Persuaded by a friend I hn ve tried your remedy and / havb utmost fully recovered after the use of a few butties. lam fully convinced Ihat Peruna is all you claim for It, and I cheerfully recommend your medicine to all who are afflicted with catarrhal trouble. ""-David F. \\iiber. I'p-ru-na a Preventive an*l Cure for Culila. Mr. C. 1". (iiven. Sussex, X. 8., Vice President of"The l'astime Pouting Club." writes: "Whenever the cold weather sets in I have for years past been very sure tw catch a severe cold which was hard to throw off, and which would leave after effects on niy constitution-the most of the winter. "Last winter T was advised to try Peruna, and within live days the cold was broken up and in five days more I was a well man.l recommended it to several of my friends and nil speak the highest praise for it. There is nothing like Peruna for catarrhal afflictions. It Is well nigh infallible as a cure, and 1 gladly endorse it."-'-C. F. Oiven. ,\ Prominent Slntrer Snveil From I.UNN of Voice. Mr. Julian Weisslitz, 17." Seneca street, Buffalo, N. V.. is corresponding' secretary of The Sangerlust, of New York; is the leading second bass-of the 3angerlust, the largest German sing ing society of New York and also the oldest. "I'reeinely on Ail \ erlined." Soon after one of the largest American railways had been opened a traveler noticed a marked disregard for punctuality on the part of the officials, but he was interested in the couritt.\ and made no complaint. At last the terminus was reached. There he niet a beaming official of the company, who, pulling out his wateft, said: "Just look and see what time you make it, will you please." "It wants ten minutes to one," said the traveler, a little puzzled. "Yes, sir. 12:50 exactly, and that's the liour she's timed to arrive! How's that for promptness? Crossing the continent, al most 3.00! l miles, and getting here at 12:50 o'clock precisely as advertised!" "1 can't deny that, you know," said the traveler; "how many days were you late?" "Oil, two or three, perhaps, but we struck the coast at 12:50!"— St. Louis Republic. Xot for Monrner*. "May I offer you a nip?" "Thanks! Hut nothing sweet—l am still In deep mourning."—Filgende Hlaetter. 1 I For Infants and Children. lASTQRIi The You Have *LaesS6» I *N» Bou 6j« similating the Food andßcgula- if _ M lui£ the Slouiachs anrf Bowels of Bears the I. « teraKn i , /(/tA» n ———7: „, I Signature /Aw Promotes Digestion.Cheerful- | Jy J V%k* ness and Rest.Confains neither I' /» & Jjf « g ! Opium, Morphine nor Mineral. :S 01 3f\ Ejf : 1 fl \\ I* (» /icy* afOUIkSWL'EirrrCHEn i' ut Seal . fflf (j Of M yt/x.Smna * l w t ltofl B I 1 f\ .fi® In lit Cai{xPttik'ioda-+ I - v \\ Harm Se+d - I ;'sß \ \ B it&SvUr. ) IMk y * |0 Aperfecl Remedy forConslipa- ajj [ \l fl» UV U fion, Sour Stomach, Diarrhoea S I ■|T j Worms .Convulsions .Feverish- m I |Jr p *| ; ness and Loss or SLEEP. \JV ® OT Ulf O 112 ; Fac Simile Signature of j|] 88^ s THE OINTAUII eOMMNV. NEW VONK CITY. YOUR GRANDFATHER j LINIMENT j cupboa.rd Sixty Y AgO. 1 There tvas no better remedy then for Man or Dcast, &nd there never I has boon a. bettor roinody since. Keep it in the house, r r r&v-u*. g-**k w*,r*ij./:--Eaßccig. Tn 1599 The Sangerlust celebrated its fiftieth anniversary with a large cele bration in New York City. The follow ing is- liis testimony: "About two years ago I caught a se vere cold while traveling and which settled into catarrh of the bronchial tubes, and so affected my voice that I was obliged to cancel my engagements. In distress I was advised to try I'eruna, and although 1 had never used a patent medicine before. 1 sent for a bottle. "\Y ords' but illy describe my to find that within a few days 1 was greatly relieved, and within three weeks I was entirely recovered. I am never without it- now, and take an oc casional dose when 1 feel run down." —Julian Weisslitz. If you do not derive prompt and sat isfactory results from the use of I'eru na write at once to Dr. Hartman, giv ing a full statement of your case and he will be pleased to give you his valu able advice gratis. Address Dr. Hartman, President of The Hartman Sanitarium, Columbus. Ohio. ltainlriK Irish Hulls. Tt is a Hloemfontein paper which apolo gizes to its readers in its second edition for the nonappearance of its iirst edition, ow ing to an accident in the publication office. \Vhicli shows that they are already raising fine Irish bulls in South Africa.—Boston Herald. "A dose in time saves live.?." Dr. Wood's Norway I'ine Syrup; nature's remedy for oughs, colds, pulmonary diseases of iverv tort. Sibyl—"Oil, Mr. De Tanque, why do you refer to my singing as a 'treat.' De Tanque —"Your liquid notes fairly intoxicate me. Baltimore Herald. Cures croup, sore throat, pulmonary trou bles.—Monarch over pain ot every sort. Dr. .Thomas' Kclectric Oil. Jjots of people who admit they are in re duced circumstances would get fighting mad if anyone accused them of being poor.—Chi cago Daily News.