2 CAMERON COUNTY PRESS. H. H. MULLIN, Editor. Published Every Thursday. TERMS OF SUBSCRIPTION. PIT year (2 00 If paid in advance 1 nl) ADVERTISING RATES: Advertisements are published at the rate of one dolmr per square for one insertion and tifiy cents per square for each subsequent insertion. Kates by the year, or for six or three months, ore low and uniform, and will be furnished on application. Legal and Official Advertising per square, three times or less. ?2: each subsequent inser tion ;o cents per square. Local notices lo cents per line for one inser seriion; n 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. IJuslncKK cards. Ave lines or less. 15 per year; over live lines, at the regular rates of adver tising. No local inserted for less than 75 cents per issue. JOB PRINTING. The Job department of the PUESS is complete and atlords facilities for doing the best class of W rW. PAII'IIITI.AK A ITEN i ION PA ID TO LAW PHINTINO. No paper will be discontinued until arrear eg. s are paid, except at the option of the pub lisher. l'apers sent out of the county must be paid for in advance. Some showmen of Brooklyn lately found it necessary to kill an elephant .... , which, by her vi- It r fi ii c inclit of ' J ciousness, had be. Keeling. come a menace to the lives of her keepers and the pub lic. With the true showman's in stinct, they planned to make the execution a spectacle. Death was to be attempted simultaneously by poison, by shooting, and if these methods were not effective, by drown ing and strangulation. The affair, duly advertised, was to take place on an island in an artificial lake the shores of which would make an amphitheater for the crowd who were willing to pay the price of ad mission. The spectacle had already been advertised when the "society with the long name" stepped in. There the matter ended. "Topsy" was killed, but not in the presence of any crowd who paid to see the sight. More recently still an asso ciation in Connecticut announced a public mouse-killing contest as one of the attractions of an approaching cat show. A thousand live mice were to be released in a ring about which the patrons of the show would gather, and prizes were to be award ed to the cats which made the quick est. and most numerous "kills." Here again the Society for the Prevention of Cruelty to Animals interfered. Its action w- on the New York stork exchange, though less, than for llMil, was Hill t iK'h a., in indicate abnormal activity. In I'H>| fchares were sold; lust year I T.'i.ooo ix«t. Of Mttn - lacks MMNM, 111, 11 s were ULTL. IN I " 0.1 I'aeili.- alone in,- 500,01(1 SHARES cliunged hands; the en lire capital OF the road was nold the tiim* over In New York alone! The |»ar value of stock sold came to the total of fThis IS four billions C Miller than the EMU blued i*ed nations of the earth; it |* eight limes the valiii- of our foreign coiti lueivi . Ho, allow uy fi.f u|| it hat limy be ealb d l«. itimutt .use IMOHI tut amount of uitttiuu. SILVER STILL TO THE FORE. Chrnp Dollar l>e iiioern I a UnLr I'brir l.iul Stanil on (lie Philippine Currency Hill. Notwithstanding all the talk of the democratic party repudiating Bryan ism, it is very evident that the taint still clings to it. especially that part of the Bryan doctrine which favors the free and unlimited coinage of silver at the 16 to 1 ratio. This is amply dem onstrated in the United States senate, says the Troy Times, where democratic members rally to the silver standard at- every opportunity. The particular object of their hostility just now is the bill which is intended to place the cur rency of the Philippines on a gold basis and give commercial and industrial stability to the islands. The prospects have seemed good for the passage of the. bill, but recently the democratic senators have manifested a disposition to talk it to defeat. Senator Teller, of Colorado, is especially active in opposi tion, on the. ground that it means a death blow to silver, to which he and some of his western associates are ap parently) wedded by indissoluble bonds. It appears to make no difference to those men what financial disaster and commercial inconvenience threaten those in whose interests this legisla tion is desired and who are suffering because of the incongruities, perplexi ties and manifold evils arising from the preent chaotic condition of the Philip pine currency. Nor are they moved by the fact that the whole.civilized world is recognizing the folly and uselessncss of trying to impart a factitious and un warranted monetary value to silver. With such countries as Mexico and China, both of which have for centuries shown special preference for silver as THE DEMOCRATIC RING MASTER. Mr. Bryan Says He Will Not Ride But He Proposes to Hold the Whip and Rein. —Minneapolis Journal. currency, seeking an adjustment which ■will give gold its proper place as a standard of value and lix the relation of silver to gold at a reasonable rat io,• and with silver at such a low valuation in the markets of the world, it would seem that the most ardent friend of the white metal would perceive the in evitable and act accordingly. Hut l!ry aii'ism is hard to eradicate from certain minds, and-its latest outcropping shows what a strong bold it still has upon a large and influential element of the democratic party, notwithstanding the unchallengeable verdict given against it by the American people in the two most recent and very strenuous presi dential campaigns. The argument put forth by these obstructive democratic senators and which has been heard with nauseating iteration aid reiteration of late years —that tf> deny free coinage to silver at the 10 to 1 ratio is a gross discrimina tion against the white metal has no foundation in fact. The American peo ple have m ver discriminated against silver. It is one of tin- great and valu able products—though very far from being the most valuable—of the conn try. and tin- popular judgment has been on the side of fair treatment. In reality the discrimination has been rather for it than against it, as the enormous number of silver dollars now in existence demonstrate. Much oft hi' national legislation relating to silver has gone to the utmost limit of safety in "recognizing" that metal, lint con gress and the people could not be in duced to favor anything so disust rous as would have been the opening of the mints for the unrestricted coinage of "dolhn " that where worth less than SU cents. It looks as though the cheap dollar men were making their last stand on the Philippine hill. And there lire hopeful signs that even with tie ob struct Ivenet- p rmltted under tin- sen lite rules they are dextlned to another and let tin. trn t a final deft at. E "T'ree trade papers that note the falling ">tf in iron mid steel export* Hml the iltci'rji > e ill Import *of I lie ► U lite articles forget to say that the home diinuinl U l>,v far the greatest ever known, nad that the supply fr< n» all aouree-, tun ■••an ely keep pace with it. ► K|. I. oil! filolie llelllorrat. I 'Mr, llrynfl i ttlntf ne*t H.my- I . , part» iHPfiutHi I. I.i lti> two ii*ftut». 11t11..1l \ (itui.). CAMERON COUNTY PRESS, THURSDAY, MARCH 5, 1903. HAVE KEPT THE FAITH. ItepubliloanN [(rilcpin thr I'lrilKM Alutlt- !>)' I'realdrnt Roaarvelt lu the Cai»l>itltfn of 1!MI2. The passage by the house of the El kins bill to prevent and punish discrim ination among railway shippers prac tically completes the administration programme for present, legislation- re garding the control of tlie trusts, says the Chicago Inter Ocean. The Klkins bill changes the present law chiefly in punishing the corpora tion for whose benefit secret rebates are granted rather than the personal agent of the corporation. Instead of threatening with fine orimprisonment the man whose livelihood may depend upon his "getting business," no matter how, it seeks to line the corporation for whose benefit business is illegiti mately obtained. The practical sense of this change needs no argument. The other leading feature of the ad ministration programme was that the operations of interstate corporations should be given wholesome publicity. That has been sought and probably se cured by the Nelson amendment tothe bill establishing the new department of commerce and labor. Incidental fea tures were the bills to expedite prose cutions of offending corporations and gi\ing the departnient of justice funds needed to obtain evidence. The opposition in congress to these measures finally settled down to the assertion that they "would not« hurt the trusts." It is to be noted, however, that such criticism was voiced only by those congressmen who have swal lowed Mr. Ilryan's penitentiary pre scription and who cannot understand that a remedy is to cure—not to exter minate. The American people, however, have 110 desire to exterminate any corpora tion engaged in any legitimate indus try. They recognize the necessity of the corporations. They desire only that these industrial organizations shall not do evil and shall not be per mitted tfi employ their powers oppres sively. And in promoting legislation limited to that purpose the administra tion has obeyed the will of the people. That theenactraents'of this congress will solve the whole trust problem is not to be expected. That problem is :oo complex. Hut these measures are i beginning of a solution. They are -■tops in the right direction, and as long steps as it was safe to take at the ■iresent time. In enacting them the republican ma jority in congress has redeemed the pledges made by Theodore Roosevelt ■o the people in the campaign of 1902. The republican party, led by Theodore Koosevelt, has overcome opposition within and without its ranks, and has Kept the faith. OPINIONS OF THE PRESS. C TC<>\. Hryan is rather "choosy" ns to his company at democratic dinners. ■(.'lwinnnti Kmjuirer (dem.). tt "The r< publican party in the state and throughout the country will re main it nit id. strong and a power for the good of the people.- Albany Jour nal. C 'Condensed into the bri« fist possi ble space, Mr. Itryiin's refusal to accept an invitation to dine in the prisince of Mr. ( leu land means that the baby won't play at all uuh - the baby can play the baby's way. Philadelphia In quirer. C The thing that stani! a: ilnst ex- See ret ary Olnt \as a ilemiH- lat ie ealiebs strike. That • hotiltl coin hi i! voles, but i inoerata look at it differently liidlunapoH, Journal. i hairiii 'ii Jones , 112 ii i-democrat • national committee, my* that "we II ( I -I. NI: LILLT >M drift quiet It. ami Juiui cau'i • ItitLc lite 111- JtilH - hill I|f eilllidll't eeji »ti|| 112 be tried. ami he will not o < ieivUliO leader, SHOOTING AFFRAY. An Attempt to Arrest Striking Miners by Oflicers Resisted. &hot* Wore ICxoliansjod-'Tbree .Tllner* Killed, Two .llortally Wounded and a Number of Other* on Itolli Side* .11 ore or Lewa Nerioiihly Hurt. Charleston, W. Va., Feb. 2f>.—-At Stanniford City, Raleigh county, a terrible battle took place at dawn yesterday between the joint posses of Deputy United States Marelial Cun ningham and Sheriff Cook, on one eide, and rioting miners on the other, as a result of which three miners were killed, two others mortally wounded and a number of others >n both sides more or less serious] 7 hurt. The trouble grew out of the at tempt to arrest 34 miners for viola tion of the blanket injunction issued by Federal .fudge Keller last August. Deputy Marshal Cunningham went last Saturday to Atkinsville, a min ing town in Raleigh county, to arrest men charged with violating the in junction. He was surrounded by a large party of miners armed with Winchester rifles, who ordered him to leave the place, an order which he quickly obeyed. Sheriff Cook at this time attempted to make some arrests under process issued by the state court, and was treated in a like man ner. Cunningham returned to this city and reported to the marshal and dis trict attorney that he could do noth ing without a large force and then only at imminent risk of precipitat ing a bloody conflict, lie was in structed to return with men suffi cient to serve the process priven him, and to do it at all hazard. Before Cunningham returned to Atkinsville, •however. Marshal John K. Thompson and S. C. Burdette, attorney for the United Mine Workers, went, to the district, speaking most of Sunday and Monday there. They found every thing quiet, the rioters having- with drawn from the immediate neighbor hood and crossed New river, going in to camp 300 strong on the north side. Thompson and Ilurdet'te came home Tuesday morning and Cunningham and a strong posse went from here to make the arrests. When Atkins ville was reached, the federal forces were joined by Sheriff Cook and his posse, the coal companies nearby fur nishing some guards, and the deputy and sheriff found themselves in com mand of about a hundred well armed and determined men. The rioters had recrossed the river on Tuesday and were parading up and down before the various coal works, from l.'O to 200 men armed with Winchester rifles. They intimidated miners at work, drove away the guards of the mines and even went so far as to disarm one guard and force him to march at •the head of their procession. Em boldened by their success, they at tempted to burn down a bridge of the Chesapeake <£- Ohio railroad over I'iney Gulch and threatened the de struction of other property. Tues day night they went into camp near Stanniford City. About daybreak Wednesday the combined posses surprised the riot ers in their camp and called on them to surrender. The reply was a shot. This was answered by a shot and im mediately a furious battle was rag ing. When it ceased, three of the rioters lay dead and many other? were wounded, two of them fatally. Special Officer Howard Smith, o* the Chesapeake & Ohio railroad, was shot in the arm. A striker slipped up on him and fired. Smith dodged the bullet intended for his heart and received it In his arm. He then killed the striker with a pistol. Seventy-three arrests were made, ten falling to the share of Deputy Cunningham and f>3 to that of Sheriff Cook. All the prisoners were taken to Berkley, the county seat of IJal eig-h. where the United States prison ers were given a hearing by Commis sioner Dunn and held for appearance here. They will be brought here to day. The federal authorities will try to get the state to give up the on so that they may be tried in the federal court, but it is doubtful if it will be done, as the state court will meet on Monday and it is thought they prob ably can be tried more expeditiously there. R. ('. Bnrdette, attorney for the Mine Workers of America, went to Beckley yesterday to attend to the case of the miners. The injunction which the miners were charged with violating was the blanket writ of Judge Keller in the suit of the Chesapeake Its teeth Into the calf ..f ltla le - Mr. (it ,hr- Inif went t'> T it* r«" ettc of In HI and »rl-d t ■ pull the dof a«(M. The mil- ] lual ttll. kill ind *everelt hit hi n. PROVE DOAN'S FREE HELP. Those who doubt, who think because other Kidney Remedies do them no good, who feel discouraged, they profit most by the Free Trial of Doan's Kidney Pills. The wondrous results stamp Doan merit. Aching backs are eased. Ilip, back, and loin pains overcome. Swelling of the limbs and dropsy signs vanish. They correct urine with brick dust sedi ment, high colored, excessive, pain in pass ing, dribbling, frequency, bed wetting. Doan's Kidney Pills dissolve and remove calculi and gravel. Relieve heart palpita tion, sleeplessness, headache, nervousness; SALEM, IND., Feb. 5, 1903.— " I received the trial package of Doan's Kidney Pills and I must confess they did mc wonderful good. It seems strange to say that I had tried several kinds of kidney medicines without doing me any good. I had back ache, pain in my bladder and scalding urine, and the sample package sent me stopped it all in a few days, and with the package I am now using from our drug store I expect to be cured permanently. It is wonderful, but sure and certain the med icine does its work. I was in constant misery until I commenced the use of Doan's Kidney Pills."— CHAS. R. COOK, P. O. Box 90, Salem, Washington Co., 111. LADY ON EDITORIAL STAFF OF LEADING RELIGIOUS WEEKLY Sends the Following Grand Testimonial to the Merits of Cuticura Remedies in the Treatment of Humours of the Blood, Skin and Scalp. "I wish to give my testimony to the efficiency of the Cuticura Reme dies in what seems to me two some what remarkable cases. I had a number of skin tumours—small ones on my arms which had never given me serious trouble ; but about two years ago one came on my throat. At first it was only about as large as a pinhead, but, as it was in a position where my collar, if not just right, would irritate it, it soon became very sensitive and began to grow rapidly. Last spring it was as large, If not larger, than a bean. A little unusual irritation of my collar started it to swelling, and in a day or two it was as large as half an orange. I was very much alarmed, and was a loss to de termine whether it was a carbuncle or a malignant tumor. "My friends tried to persuade me I __J „„ " My friends tried to persu.ide me to consult ray physician ; but dread ing that he would insist on using l the knife, I would not consent to go. Instead I got a small bottle of Cuticura Resolvent and a box of Cu ticura Ointment. I took the former according 1 to directions, and spread a thick layer of the Ointment on a linen cloth and placed it on the swelling. On renewing it I would bathe my neck in very warm water and Cuticura Soap. In a few days the Cuticura Ointment had drawn the swelling to a head, when it broke. Every morning it was opened with a large sterilized needle, squeezed and bathed, and fresh Ointment put on. l'us and blood, and a yellow, cheesy, tumorous matter came out. In about three or four weeks' time this treatment completely 'eliminated boil and tumor. The soreness that had ex Ct TICt'RA UF.MEDIKS aro soM throughout the etvtUzwt world. PRICKS: Ciilli-nr* Rpsolrent,sof. p»» bottle (In the form of Chocolate Coated Pills, 2le. pot vial ol 60),CutieuraOintment,60e. per bos, and Cuticura Soaptto. per cake. Send for the w r reat work, * Humours of the lllood. Bkm ami Scalp, and flow to Cure Them, r,4 i'aKfi. aou Diseases, with Illustration*. Teetimoniale, and Direction# In all lantmattes, Including Japanese and Chinese. llritish Depot. 27-28 Charterhouse S«j., London, fc. C. French Depot. 6 Rue de la I'aU, Paris. Australian I>cpot,K. lownsJt Co., Sydney, POTTER Dfcto AND CHEMICAL Cuai oaaxiON t Sole Proprietors* Boston, V. S. A, IT TAKES THE ACHES out of muscles and joints. Heals old sores. 1 akes inflammation out of burns and bruises. Stops any pain that a perfect liniment can stop. MEXICA/N MUSTANG LINIMENT for injuries or aches of MAN or BKAST. RUNNING FOR COVER.I fS_ro WOMEN ///' • THE ORIGINAL BtfcS.llltlSß I'.ivitn. a / r» . 85SWfiri. Tw '*|.||M |.||, *c v ill ' (Vnlfr oft F j --- -* J 'I L ' '°ISHO jiwowßoS,' 1 OHOCimMIK / 112 I f \tJ / ("H'WH'!., *1 I" ■ i .no i'li II- II Mill » I, ni ITUNNXMI ! U fr/ WIU COVER YOU y r V« V.'' H»T.ri .TiuiT »J* / v T«ewettzjt weATiira. 1 "' M '* l x us. j::. - L'Z 'i 112 ON SAU tv«rww>». A J town DROPSY mw . u,sc, r rkY : iO» To*u IAKAWAXCO.U . TOIOKfO OW . Ii \ rr—- -r-» 1 r.., !>■. 11. u. kH*k» • IMII <4, ilUllt, uiralo, N. Y.J i Medical Advice Free —Strictly Confidential? tended down into my chest was all gone, and my neck now seems to be perfectly well. sister had a similar experience. She had two large lumps come under her right arm, the result of a sprain. They grew rapidly, and our physi cian wanted to cut' them out. I would not listen to it, and she tried the Cuticura Remedies (as I did a few months ago) with magical effect. In six weeks' time the lumps had entirely disappeared,and have never returned. " 1 have great faith in the Cuticura Remedies, and I believe they might be as efficacious in similar cases with other people, and thus save much suffering, and perhaps life. I have derived so much benefit from the use of them myself that I am constantly advising others to use them. Re cently I recommended them to an office boy for his father, who was dis abled with Bait rheum. The man's feet were swollen to an enormous size, and he had not worked for six weeks. Two bottles of Cuticura Resolvent and two boxes of Cuticura Ointment worked a perfect cure. You never saw a more grateful man in your life. " I am very much in terested in another case where I have recom mended Cuticura just now. My housemaid's mother has a goitre which had reached a very dangerous point. The doctors told her that nothing could be done ; that she could live only two or three weeks, and that she would die of strangulation. She was confined to her bed. and was unable to speak, when her daughter, at my suggestion, tried the effect of the Cuticura Ointment and Cuticura Resolvent. Strange to say, she was very shortly relieved of the most distressing symptoms. The swelling seemed to be exteriorized, and she is now able to be around her house, and can talk as well as ever. " It seems to me that I have pretty good grounds for believing that Cuticura Remedies will prove suc cessful in the most distressing forms of blood and skin humours, and if you wish to use my testimonial as herein indicated, I am willing that you should do so, with the further privilege of revealing my name and address to such persons as may wish to substantiate the above state ments by personal letter to me." Chicago, Nov. 12, 1902.