2 CAMERUN COUNTY PRESS. H. H. MULLIN, Editor. Published Every Thursday. TERMS OF SUBSCRIPTION. fer •* OJ If paid In advance » B ® ADVERTISING RATES: Advertisements are published at the rate ot •no doLar per square for one Insertion and fifty acuta per square for each subsequent Insertion. Rates by the year, or for su or three mouthy, •re low and uniform, and will be furnished on appllcat.oti. Legnl ai d OHtclal Advertising per square, »hree times or less, 12; each subsequent inser tion fO cents per square Local notlcos lu centa per line for one lnser •ertlon 112« cents per line for each subsequent soQseoutlve Insertion. Obituary notices over five llneg, 10 cents per line Simple announcements of births, mar rintres and i!eaths will be Inserted free. Business cards, live lines or less. 15 per year', over hve 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 PRHS IS complete •ud afford-, facilities for doing the best class of work PAHTXCUI.AU ATTKMTIOH PAIDTO LAW PRINTING. No paper will be discontinued until arrear ages are paid, excert ».t the optiou of the pub usher. Papers sent out of the county must be paid lor in advance. Keep in Prime Condition. Nature, says Success, is not soatl mentiful or merciful. If you violate her law. you must pay the penalty, though you sit on a throne; kingorbeg gar is all the same with her. You can not plead weakness or handicap as an excuse for failure. She demands that you be ever at the top of your condition, that you always do your best, and will accept no excuse or apology. A weak ness anywhere mats one's whole career. 11,I 1 , will rise up as a ghost all through one's life-work, mortifying, condemn ing and convicting one of past error. Every indiscretion or vicious indulgence simply opens a leak which drains off success capital. Of what use is great success capital, of mental and physical equipment, If you are not wise enough to manage it to the best advantage, and to make it last until your success Is as sured? It is sad to see a young man try to win high place with a broken-down constitution, or with his faculties halt trained, and his success army completely demoralized, his prospects ruined by a shattered physique. The saddest thing of all is that wise living might have made fulfillment of ambition possible, and en riched the world with a noble, well roundel life. The great problem, then, ■which everyone has to face, Is how to generate energy, how to conserve it, and how to keep oneself always at the top ot his condition. New Use for Electricity. Mr. E. B. Green, superintendent of the Edison Illuminating Electric company at Altoona, Pa., writes to the Electrical World and Engineer of his successful use of electricity for thawing water pipes. He has thawed 250 feet. of one inch iron pipe in 20 minutes, using be tween 18 and 20 kilowatts; for between 30 and 40 feet of three-quarter-inch pipe, five to eight minutes and 11 to 15 kilo watts are required. The voltage is re duced to not over 50, and the connection made to the pipe to be thawed and to a hydrant or other connection to the main on the other side of the frozen portion. The work is performed for customers la less time and with much more cleanli ness than it could be done by the plumber. The cost lies chiefly in the carting of the apparatus and labor. A large decrease of consumption In playing cards with a correspondingly large increase in the amount of liquor used during the past eight months ia noted by treasury department officials in the receipts of the revenue service. Compared with the same period a year ago the number of packs of playing cards used by the people of the United States was reduced 8,000,000. On the other hand the consumption of whisky was enough larger to result in adding $2,500,- 000 more revenue to the treasury. Tho cigarette fiend also increased his allow ance, for the revenue from that source went up $750,000. As to why playing cards should be less used, while drink ing and smoking increased, is a question which government officials do not un dertake to solve. Nor do we. Bishop Mylne tells In the London Spectator of an experience he had when in America. A workman had shown the way, as far as It coincided with his own, «nd at parting, knowing those he had directed to be English men, he took off his cap and most cour teously, and said, "Good evening, gen tlemen." He had retired "half-across the pavement" when he thus took leave of them. "My friend and 1," remarks the bishop, "said to each other that an Englishman in similar circum stances would not have retired out of arm's length for fear we should offer him a gratuity."' Berlin was recently connected witn Copenhagen by a new International ferry. The boats run between Warne munde, on the German coast, and Gjedesby, on one of the Danish islands, and carry through trains over the 20- mile stretch of water between the two points. The ferry makes it possible for a traveler togo In almost a straight line between the two capitals without change of cars. Makaroff was known as the "Cossack of the Sea," while Skrydloff, his suc cessor, is known as the "Bulldog of the Navy." Togo is known to the Japs as the "Whole Works of the Oceans." A LARGE ORDER FOR JUDGE PARKER. » "The Judge's Friends Go So Far as to Say He Will Bring Cleveland and Bryan Together."—Walter Wellman. THE WEST AND SOUTHWEST Some Reasons Why the Republican Party Is Stronger Than Ever Among the People. The democrats charge that the repub licans, in proposing to consolidate the four territories into two states, are actu ated by partisan and sectional motives, and that they want to minimize the "in fluence of the west and the southwest in the citadel of federal power, the United States senate." This is the lan guage of the democratic report against the bill passed by the house to admit Oklahoma and the Indian territory jointly as the state of Oklahoma, and to let in Arizona and New Mexico to gether as the state of Arizona. The same language was repeated by many of the democrats in their speeches against the bill. The bill had the solid support of the republicans and the solid opposition of the democrats. It is said to be the purpose of the democrats to make this charge agarnst, the republic ans a feature of the presidential cam paign in the west in 190-1. The repub licans ought to hope that their enemies will do this. It will give a chance to show what has been the actual attitude of the two big parties toward the west. Do the democrats who are prating about republican hostility to the west know what was the issue that created the republican party? asks the St. Louis Globe-Democrat. It was the demo crats' repeal in 1854 of the Missouri com promise, which repeal threw open to slavery Kansas. Nebraska and the rest of the territories above the Missouri com promise line. This was a national issue in its broad features, but it was directly and particularly a western issue. The republican party was founded to protect the west from this democratic iniquity. The party got a foothold earlier in the west than it did in the east, and chiefly for the reason that it wafe the west that was especially assailed by the demo crats. Previous to the rise of the repub lican party in 1854 most of the states of the west were reliably democrats. Some of them, like Illinois, lowa and Wisconsin, were democratic in every presidential canvass in which they par ticipated until after the appearance of the republican party, and Illinois re mained democratic for president until 1860. Every state in the west voted for Pierce. the democratic candidate in 1852, just before the creation of the republican party. The west came to the republicans because the republican party was found ed on what was directly a western is sue. The republican party started out to save the west from the slavery de basement which the democratic party attempted to force upon it, and did save it. Did the democrats who are accusing the republican party of hostility to the west ever hear of a measure called the free homes law? The homestead bill had been before congress for many years before the republican party came into power. The measure was always beaten, either in congress or by the presidential veto, Buchanan interpos ing the last named barrier against it. But just as soon as the republicans, who had been its champions from the he ginning, got into control of the gov ernment, they passed the free homes law. against the opposition of the demo crats. This law, which went into oper ation at the beginning of 1863, has added almost as large an area to the settled region -of the west as was populated in the thirteen colonies at the time of the Dick Croker Sends Message. Comrade Croker sends us a cheering Trord from Wantage. He concedes with frankness That we have no chance this year, even with Parker, but. we must "consolidate the party by supporting him," so that "the prospects for success four years hence will ba improved." Comrade Croker is too experienced a democrat to predict success four or even eight or twelve years hence, but he be lieves in gradual and consistent im provement of chances, so that our chil dren and grandchildren may reap that CAMERON COUNTY PRESS, THURSDAY, MAY 19, 1904. battle of Lexington. A republican presi dent, Theodore Roosevelt, started the movement which led to the passage of national irrigation, which a republican congress enacted. This measure will supplement the work done by the repub licans in the free homes act which Lin coln signed in 18ti2, and will plant hun dreds of thousands of homes in the pres ent arid regions between the western border of Kansas, Nebraska and Okla homa and the Pacific ocean. The re publican party has been the builder of the west. Every presidential candidate which it has nominated thus far ex cept Blaine has been a western man. It has transferred the country's center of political and social gravity to the Mis sissippi valley. If the democrats make a campaign issue of the republican par ty's attitude toward the west it /.will make hundreds of thousands of new votes for the republicans on the Al leglianies' sunset side. DRIFT OF PUBLIC OPINION. crit begins to look as if Mr. Bryan regarded his democratic confreres as a hopeless aggregation.—Washington Star. icrAmerica's lead in diplomacy ought to provide the republican platform with one of its strongest planks.—St. Louis Globe-Democrat. forget that Judge Parker's hair is red. It may be that he is afraid to trust himself to speak what is in his mind. —Chicago Tribune. (Clt is reported that Gorman still hopes to secure the nomination. That man must have an awiul opinion of the democratic party.—Chicago Record- Herald. (C'The democratic party has had plen ty of leisure in which to repent the hasty impulse that nominated Bryan in 18%, and the prospects are excellent for plenty more leisure of the same kind. — Indianapolis Journal. ICTWilliam J. Bryan does not propose, he says, to name the man he deems most fit for the presidency. It is not necessary. Everyone knows the dis tinguished citizen Mr. Bryan has in mind.—Philadelphia Record. ETThe presidency of the United States has never been an office with in the grasp of men pursuing the tactics of body-snatchers, whether they were as rich as Hearst or as poor as Bryan.—Milwaukee Wisconsin. Parker is trying to bring Hill and Tammany together in har mony; it is reported that he expects to establish peaceful relations be tween Cleveland and Bryan. If he succeeds he will be known as the boss peace maker. —Knoxville (Tenn.) Journal. ICAS a matter of fact, there has been nothing rash or reckless in the Roosevelt administration, nothing whatever to justify the charge that he is an unsafe man. No action in re gard to domestic or foreign affairs has been taken without thoughtful de liberation and without due considera tion for the interests and welfare of the country.—Omaha Bee. ir?'lt is noteworthy that quite a number of delegates to the democratic national convention have been elected who are "said to favor Parker." This means that they are open to persua sion and that if anyone turns up who in their opinion is stronger than the New York man they are free to sup port him. The Parker boom has by no means been made unanimous as yet.—Troy (N. Y.) Times. which we have sown. This is true dem ocratic statesmanship, though we are sorry that Mr. Crokor and our beloved Bryan cannot get together on the man ner of procedure. It looks as if we musi call in Col. Watterson to decide the | question.—Roswell Field, in Chicago Post. is only one plank in a demo cratic platform upon which all kinds of democrats can agree. It is this: We want the offices.—Springfield (111.) Journal. IMPROVEMENT IS thorities seem anxious to strengthen the defenses of the rock, especially j as regards the heavy guns, for which £24,000 lias been voted. BE WARNED. Ileed nature's warnings! Pain tells of lurking* disease. fimPnights of unrest arc WTO danger signals Wjffl SO warning l you to cure Hfni rV s Kidney Pills, thousands of perma- ! nent cures. Frank D. cattle-buyer and j farmer, Catskill, N. Y.,says: "Doctors | told me ten years ago that I had j Briglit's Disease, and said they could do ; nothing to save me. My back aclicd so I could not stand it to even drive about, | and passages of the kidney secretions j were so frequent as to annoy me greatly. | I was growing - worse all the time but Doan's Kidney Pills cured me, and I have been well ever since." A FREE TRIAL of this great kidney ' medicine which cured Mr. Overbaugh will be mailed on application to any part of the United States. Address Foster-Mil burn Co., liuiYalo, N. Y. For sale by all dealers; price 50 cents per box. , j p——— —cap—am—aa» j OSTRICH FE& THERS AT lIKTAII. KROM MAMI/KM'TV KKIt I I 810 B^VUMG -1 Write for I 'ire liM. f\\lng Iu 1' nam* and ad If«MU j I MAIL ORDER FEATHER C0.,41W.24th Bt.,N.Y, I I——— a—a——t—a——fl Cna CA| P Ileftclqunrtprs for Wlßoonsln Timber lull OMuL l_,a n(lH.Cutov«T I .an (Ik, Kurnia and Sum mer KeaortH. Heveral lunge t raciH for colon!r.utmu A. V. riTAiiil, 1£» Laballo Siruul,CLicMgo. I ! I Mrs. A. Hobson, 225 Washington ♦ S 112 St., Lansing, Mich., writes: 112 112 "Peruna has been such a blessing i 4 to my only child, as well as myself, ? 4 that I feel Induced to give my test!- I 11 monial. He has always suffered i i 4 from catarrh of the head and throat, t j I and I had to use extra precautions 112 | J so as not to have him exposed to I ' i damp or cold weather. Last year J I he was taken with la grippe, and i j J as it was a severe case, caused me * I i much anxiety. No medicine helped t * him till he took Peruna. / noticed I * an Improvement at once and in 1 ! 1 three weeks he was a different j * child; the grippe had been com- 1 J pletely cured and I noticed that the I 1 catarrh was made better, lie kept ♦ 1 taking it two weeks longer, when 1 he was entirely well. I now use it j off and on for colds, cramps, indl- 112 gestion or general indisposition,and ! ! i find it superior to any doctors or j I medicine I evar tried. It keeps me, j |as well as my child, in perfect 112 4 health, and I gladly recommend it I I to mothers. " —Airs. A. Ilobson. ♦ We liave on file many thousand testi monials like the ones given above. We can only ffive our readers a slight glimpse of the vast array of unsolicited endorsements we are receiving every month. No ot.lier physician in the world has received such a volume of enthusiastic and grateful letters of I t hanks as Dr. Ilartinan for Peruna. . - - p : It Cores Colds, Cotighs. Sore Throat, Crotip, Infln j cnv.li. 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Tlio leaves, I 0 x 10, aro loosely bound and may be framed. Send 250 to "KATY," C 44 Katy Building, St. Louis, Mo. THE KATY FLYER, the crac ' t tru ' n °* " 1C &T. J R'y—to and from Oklahoma, Texas and Old Mexico. I PAY SPOT CASH FOR lass! Warrants Issued to soldiers of any war. Write mo at onco. FRANK 11. KKGKII. liarth Block. Denver, Cola PI! j£& A rn jjß JL V i KM l' fl une'buildiui, iNuw York, cim ram To quickly Introduce the bevt Stomach-Liver Remedy, I BBImL* 1 send, durlnjr May, to any a«l --■ nusadn nrHi.Hu full nixed liok. »>y mall FREE. Address F. S. CASE, LUiiAN, OHIO. MIANTED AT ONCC « Walters, Wait WH ressos, kitchen faelj>. buss L> >vs, iisU w;;.«hcr»/, " * electrician*, stage bands and musicians on »p. I count c»f World's Kair enterprises. (»»*> d waves. Apj.;» to i RLt rr * BHKTMS, GUT .Market 8t M ST. 1.01 IS, * 0 » PATENTS SSs?£»£' lTl'7.<;i;KAl.l> & CO.. Box g, Washlngion, D.O. A. N. K.—C 202t