2 CAMERON COUNTY PRESS. 11. H. MULLIN, Editor. Publishtd Every Thursday. TERMS OF SUBSCRIPTION. r year {2 00 It paid In advance > »0 ADVERTISING RATES: Advertisements lire published at the rate ot •ne dol.ar per square for one insertion unit tifiy cents l er square for each subsequent insertion Hate-, ny the year, or for si* or three months ' are low ami uniform, and will be furnished on L pi Ileal or. [jeßi.l at.d Official Advertising per square. If :ee times or less, 12. each subsequent inser t o i • U t enls per square. 1-ocal notices lu cents per line fur one inser certion: ft cents per line (or each subsequent con-ecutive insertion. Obituary notices over five lines 10 cents per lit-e. Simple at.nouncements of births, mar. riiiKcv ,n.l deaths « ll be Inserted free. Bu> iness cards, five litres or less. »5 per year; e\i r live lines, at the regular rates of adver t s ng. No local inserted for less than 75 cents per issue. JOB PRINTING. The Job department of the PKESS Is complete (Mi . rr rd- facilities for doing the best ria>s of yr rl! PAitHCULAU ATTENUON PAIDID LAW >"KJ.STINIi. No paper will be discontinued until arrear »k'' " are paid, except at the option of the pub lisher- Papers sent out of the county must he paid *■ r in advance. It is not a little amazing to note a sentiment at Plymouth, Mass., opposed ... ~ . to the carrying off I*l > in oiil li Hock of Plymouth rock anil the l-'alr. . «. , ... to St. Louis during the world's fair. Plans are now being made to bring this much desired project to success and millionsof thrilled Amer icans may vibrate between Liberty bell and Plymouth rock, if old Plymouth, guardian ofthis sacred granite relic, will consent. Plymouth, observes the St. Louis Globe-Democrat, should pause to reflect that the "rock" is an inheritance of every one of the 80,000,000 Ameri cans that now throng this great land, and that each one of them feels as pro found a sense of ownership in it as the people of Plymouth. Upon it, in the person of Mary Chilton, that vigorous Puritanism that has marked its im print on our laws and customs from one ocean to the other, first set foot, it is the rock of our liberties. Though it weighs but five tons, all Europe cannot outbalance it; it was the stumbling block on which Great Britain stubbed her toe in 1770. It represents to us the birthplace of liberty as the liberty bell does its cradle. Pennsylvania is gener ous. Why cannot Massachusetts em ulate her? Give us the "Rock." Press advices from Washington state that Dr. Wiley, chemist in the agricui- Or w ilev's To- lura ' department, is about to begin an- Ixiceo Tests. . , , other interesting t«*st. This time the effect of tobacco upon the human system will be investi gated. As described in a dispatch, a certain number of young men will be se lected for '.he experiment. These per sons will be given certain allowances of tobacco of various grades and qualities and designed for varying uses. Exam inations and conditions will be made and enforced, intended to make there suits as reliable as possible. Work along this line of investigation follows the idea embodied in the tests recently con cluded with 12 young men to determine the effects of certain food adulterants. The idea of the experiment is intensely practicable. 11 only remains to see if it is possible to secure reliable results. In a considerable measure any reliable in formation that will develop from the data will be valuable to the government in promoting its work in developing and growing the tobacco plant. Added to this there will be a certain amount of in formation forthcoming to the general public that will be interesting, to say the least, and possibly facts that will be pro ductive of some notable results. Alfred Mosely, of England, who re cently investigated industrial condi tions in America, made this prediction: "Labor and capital must be partners in the best sense. They ought to be at peace with each other. In this regard the work of your Civic Federation is ex cellent, bringing together, as it does the reasonable elements of the two great active factors in production. I think that profit sharing in some form must finally come. There must be a minimum wage for labor, with old age pensions, interest on capital, a fund for expansion, another for depreciation, and a division of the balance between capital and labor. This is an ideal, but it is possible to attain it, in the course of time, peaceably." They don't do now as they used 1o do, says Mark Twain, international joker and burden lifter. Time was when a lec turer appeared in a place to fulfill an engagement he was taken out in a wagon or a sleigh and driven around the town, to the courthouse, the cemetery, and the jail, and to a number of other places that he didn't feel as though he was quite ready for iust yet. But nowadays a lecturer goes into a plae:e and oul again without much stopping to sec things. Baron von Echt, an Austrian who has been traveling in this country, is in rap tures over his treatment here. "I do not believe," he says, "that such hospitable treatment would be accorded a stranger in any other country in the world. 1 have sojourned in many lands, but in nc other have I been received with such marked courtesy and open-hearted hos pitality. My tour of the United States convinces me that the American people .in many respects are superior to the inhabitants of ail other lands." THINGS ARE DIFFERENT. Comlif ions I ruler Cleveland Xot \\ ha' Tbey Are t ii pace, which was the last on the card. Detroit, Mich., July 25.—As tlie re sult of very queer driving in the 2:13 pace, the Inst event on Friday's card at the meeting of the Detroit Driv ing club at (irosse I'ointe track, Driver A 1 Proctor, of Aurora, Ont., who was behind Darky, was fined S2OO and suspended for 30 days; Driver Vance Nuckols, yho was behind Thereon Powers was fined S2OO and all-bets and pools on the race were declared off. James Butler's Eastview farm had two winners in Monroe in the 2:20 trot and Trilby Direct in the Cliam- VjCi . v'ointnerce consolation stake. In t'Te 2:OS pacing event Carthage ("jirl and Xonamie pac?d the first dead heat seen here in years. Xo namie had 110 trouble disposing of the black mare 111 the next two heats. Billy Buck was an almost prohibitive favorite for the 2:10 trot, which he took in straight heats. A PECULIAR PLEA. It lx itlnite in Ilel'eiiMe of a .Tlan on Trial lor (>runen. Clay IHcn. Lexington. Ky., July 2.1. Oen. Cas- I ■Jus Marcellus Clay, ambassador to Russia under president Lincoln, noted j ibolitionist and author, died at his j home. Whitehall, in Madison county, last night. Death was due to gen eral exhaustion. A Threat to Strike. Washington, July 33.—President Barrett, of the local organization of j bookbinders, announced yesterday | that every bookbinder in the govern- j ment printing office and the members of the allied unions will quit work if \Y. A. Miller, assistant foreman in the | Government printing office, whose dis- I missal from that office the president recently revoked, is permitted tore- j -umc work. The local union officials i have sent a communication to Secre- I tnrv Cortelyou. of the department of ; ominerce and labor, strongly ex- i pressing their position against Mil- j !er's reinstatement. RUINING COUNTRY STORES. Utira! I'rco Delivery .tlatitiiK Farmer* Too Lazy lot alt at tlic Grocery. j There comes a plaintive wail from the keepers of country :tores in ; small bergs and crossroad hamlets of Livingston county, .New York, against the rural free delivery of mails. The storekeepers say that the free delivery system is making the farmer* la/ier every day, while it is doing much to drive the country store out of existence. They say that under the influence of the free-delivery system the farm er no longer hitches up his horses to come down to the post office; that he gets his mail dumped at his door, and as a consequence of this "in iquitous system" the grangers no longer goto their former gathering places nor spend their spare cash with the storekeeper, as they were wont to do in the "good old times'* befoi-,» the gaudy mail wagon made its daily rounds. The storekeepers have also con ceived a special grievance over a re cent order promulgated by the post, office department instructing post masters throughout the country lo prepare lists of the rural free-deliv ery routes and pott them in conspicu ous places in their offices. HAZING ENDED. Hoard of Visitor- to Went Point Mili tary Academy .tlaken an IntercMlngr Keport to Secretary of li ar. The board of visitors to the West- Point military academy has made its report to the secretary of war. The report is interesting chiefly because of the very general commendation of the conditions of the academy. Jt is especially noted tluit the discipline is excellent, and that hazing lias disap peared, save in one or two cases of a. very mild character. The board made a very thorough examination of the plans and speeifi H'.ions, which have been prepared under the direction of the secretary of war, for new build ings and other improvements at the academy, and they are approved with ; out reservation. The total expendi ture for these improvements will be $5,500,000. Killed by Snake'* iilnnee. From Rio Grande, 112)., comes the , story of the strange death of Mrs. Celia Randy, a widow of that village,, who is said to have died from snake charming. Mrs.Randy's cat was trans fixed by the glance of a black snake six feet long. Snatching a club, the woman rushed to the garden to res cue her cat, and after dealing the snake a blow, fell to the ground, anil, despite medical aid, died in a short time without regaining conscious ness. The snake was killed, and many believe that Mrs. Handy was channel! by the snake, her death resulting. Prote«t« a* Insult*. That South Side lady who indig nantly refused to silence or dispose of her yelping dogs because her* neighbors had requested her to do so is an individual illustration of a certain logic unfortunately too com mon. To wrong your neighbor and then deny him redress on the ground that his protests are insulting, says the Chicago Chronicle, is a policy that is pursued not only by men and wo men, but by nations. POP Died Too Soon. A Philadelphia man paid $2,100 for the original manuscript of Poe's poem "The Hells." If. says the Chi cago Record-Herald, Poe could have got that much money for all the poems he wrote he would doubtless have considered himself the luckiest bard extant. A I'oHMlbility, England has just seized three isl ands in the Pacific ocean. It is re markable, says the Chicago Record- Herald, that England doesn't now and then lose track of them and sei/e a few islands which were already hers. BACKACHE. Backache is a forerunner and one of the most common symp toms of kidney trouble and womb displacement. READ MISS BOLLMAN'S EXPERIENCE. " Some time ago I was in a very weak condition, my work made me nervous and my back ached frightfully all the time, and 1 had terrible head aches. " My mother got a bottle of Liydia E. IMnkhani's Vegetable Com pound for me, and it seemed to strengthen my back and help me at once, and 1 did not get so tired as before. I continued to take it, and it brought health and l trength to me, and 1 want to thank you for the good it has done me." Miss Kate Bw.lmas, 142 nd St. & Wales Ave., New York City. — ssoooforfeit If original of above Jotter proving'genuineness cw. not be produced. Lydia E. Pinkham's Vegetable Compound cures because it is the greatest known remedy for kidney and womb troubles. Every woman who is puzzled about her condition should write to Mrs. I'inkham at Lynn, Mass.*, and tell her all.