Cameron County press. (Emporium, Cameron County, Pa.) 1866-1922, October 13, 1904, Page 2, Image 2

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    2
CAMERON COUNTY PRESS.
H. H. MULI.IN, Editor.
Pnblislicd Every Thursday.
TERMS OF SUBSCRIPTION.
r'cr yrar 10
( paid in udvance 1 "0
ADVERTISING RATES:
Advertisements are published at, the rate of
fnr ctuliar per square forotm Insertion anil llfij
cent* per squint' for each subsequent insertion
Rates by the year, or for six or three month*,
are low and uniform, anil will be furnished on
application.
Legal and Official Advertlsinc per square
three times or less, *2: each subsequent inser
tion -0 cents per square.
Local notices 10 cents per line for on." Inser
•ertlon: cents per line for each subsequent
consecutive Insertion.
Obituary notices over five lines. 10 cent* per
line. Simple amouncctnents of births, mar
rinues anil deaths will be inserted free.
Business cards, five lines or less. 45 per year;
over five lines, at the regular rates of adver
tising.
No local Inserted for less than 75 ccuts per
issue.
JOB PRINTING.
The ,Tob department of the Pnr«s iscomplMe
•nd affords facilities for dointf the best class of
Work. pAit'ITCL'I.AR ATI K.M'ION PAID TO LAW
PHINTINO.
No paper will bo discontinued until arrear
ages are paid, except at the option of the pub
lisher.
Papers sent out of the county must be paid
(or in advance.
The Horse Is learning.
The horse is getting wise. He always
was intelligent, but he hac learned many
things in the last few years. A really
successful horse to-daj must know a
great many things not essential to those
olden horses who did not live in electric
lighted stables or ride up and down
stairs on an elevator and did not have
their hair cut by electricity. A horse
to have a career to-day must not only
have horse sense, but he must be ac
quainted with the ways of the world,
«avs the Washington Star. He must be
a "horse-of-the-world" or a "horse
about-town," if it be permissible to
paraphrase those hard-worn phrases
"man-of-the-world" and "man-about
town." Nearly every horse is becoming
an educated horse. During the last few
years the horse has been taking a course
in the study of automobiles, and already
lie has a very good understanding of
4he subject. Time was when a horse
would forget his spavins, sore shoulders
or quarter-crack and would jumpasix
ibar gate at sight of one of these mon
sters. Now he can walk up to an auto,
look it in the lamps and sniff its evil
breath without breaking a trace or kick
ing in the dashboard. He can now meet
one of these benzine buggies on a lonely
road and a dark night without throwing
either a fit or his rider. The time may
he coming when the horse and the auto
will sleep in the same stable and drink
from the same bucket. There was the
trolley car. A few years ago it was the
abomination of every horse. Now the
horse would feel positively lonesome if
be had all the street to himself and did
not have liis wagon smashed now and
then as a diversion. The horse is learn
ing.
Beauty Not a Fatal Gift.
A professor in a Philadelphia business
college has informed a local reporter
that beauty is an obstacle to the employ
ment of women in business houses, says
the New York Mail. In Philadelphia, it
seems, business men do not, when they
advertise for a stenographer, add the
words: "No pretty girl need apply," but
they goon that principle. It appears
that they fear frivolity as an accompani
ment of beauty. It is possible that this
is a good and safe rule in Philadelphia,
tout it is certainly not a rule that is hon
ored here, and we doubt if it is in any
city where feminine beauty is not so
rare as to excite suspicion when it oc
curs. Nor is there the slightest ground
for the assumption that a pretty wom
an is likely to be any more frivolous
than a plain one. The gift of beauty
may, indeed, be fatal if no strength go
with it, but the newer, the sounder
chivalry of our modern time assumes
that goodness goes with beauty as nor
mally among women as it does through
out the whole gamut of nature.
Robbers attempting to hold up a Mar
ehalltown (la.) editor at midnight
showed remarkably poor judgment all
round. In the first place, they over
looked the fact that all editors are fight
ing men from the ground up. Before the
fight, was over they discovered that a
well-developed editor's skull is too thick
to be penetrated by a pistol bullet fired
even at close range. These robbers were
taking long chancs to get at the little
change an lowa editor is supposed to
have on him when going home at a
midnight hour ending his week of un
remitting toil, mad enough to fight at
the drop of the hat.
Most of our maps of Asia are drawn to
a small scale, and on such maps, re
marks the World's Work, the Japanese
archipelago fills little space. But she is
larger than England and more populous.
She has C,000,000 more people than
France. She sent six armies over sea.
within six months, every one of which
was as big as either army that met at
Waterloo. She has sent to Manchuria
twice as many soldiers in six months ?*i>
England sent to South Africa in two
}f ars.
And now coraes an inventor with a
telephone attachment that enables yen
to see the person with whom you are
talking—an invention, however, that s
not. likely to add materially to the profits
of the companies, except where Central
is really especially pretty. What is
really needed, say some of the telephone
iis'-rs in the west, is an invention that
will enable a tnan to use two different
tj!sterns and pay for only one of them.
HENRY C. PAYNE IS DEAD.
POSTMASTER GENERAL'S ILL
NESS COVERED SEVEN DAYS.
Was Unconscious for Six Hours Before
Death Came—President Roose
velt Was the Last Offi
cial Caller.
Washington, Oct. —llenry C.
Payne, postmaster general of the Uni
ted States, a member of the national
republican committee, a stalwart of
his party, with the history of which
both in his home state and nationally
he has been identified for many years,
died at his apartments at the Arling
ton hotel at C:10 o'clock last, night,
aged 60 years.
Mr. Payne had been in poor health
for at least two years, but hi* last ill
ness covered only seven days, an at
tack of heart trouble last week pre
cipitating the end at. a time when af
ter a rest he seemed to have recovered
a small measure of his vitality im
paired by years of arduous labor.
Death came after nearly six hours of
unconsciousness.
Hon. Henry C. Payna.
The last official caller to inquire as
to Mr. Payne's condition was Presi
dent Roosevelt, and he had been gone
only about ten minutes when the
stricken member of his cabinet expir
ed. Secretary Hay had called at the
Payne apartments a few minutes be
fore the president made his visit.
Neither entered the sick room. As
Mr. Roosevelt was leaving he spoke
freely of Mr. Payne to the newspaper
men gathered in front of the hotel as
"the sweetest, most lovable and ruost
truthful man I ever knew."
Around Mr. Payne's bedside at the
time of his death was his wife. Rev.
Dr. Dunlap, pastor of St. John's Epis
copal church; Maj. and Mrs. W. S.
Cameron, of Jamestown, N. Y.; Mr.
and Mrs. Winfield Cameron, of Mil
waukee; Charles L. Jones and Miss
Louise E. Jones, relatives: Private
Secretary Whitney, Miss Marie Bar
bieri, an old companion of Mrs.
Payne; Mr. and Mrs. W. L. Mason, of
Washington, old-time friends of Mr,
and Mrs. Payne, and the faithful col
ored messenger at the department of
the postmaster general.
Funeral services will be held at St.
John's Episcopal church in this city
next Friday morning and at 3:15 that
afternoon the body will be taken to
the Pennsylvania railroad station and
placed aboard the private car of Pres
ident Earling, of the Chicago, Milwau.
kee & St. Paul railroad. The remains
should arrive at Milwaukee Saturday
evening anil services will be held next
Sunday at All Saints' Episcopal
church there.
AFTER THREE YEARS.
Alaskan Telegraph System Is Com
pleted—lt Contains the First Sub
marine Cable of American Manufac
ture.
Washington, Oct. 5. —Gen. Greely
has received a dispatch from Maj. Ed
gar Russell, of the signal corps, an
nouncing that the Burnside, which lias
been engaged in laying a cable from
Valdez, Alaska, buoyed the eastern
cable end at the mouth of Sitka harbor
on Monday afternoon. It will require
several days to make the shore end
connections in the narrow passage of
Sitka harbor and throw open the cable
to commercial business.
This completes the Alaskan tele
graph system which has been under
construction for the past three years,
during which time about 1,000 miles of
land lines and submarine cables have
been constructed and laid, and it
brings the Nome and Bering Strait re
gions in direct communication with
the United States; over an all-American
route.
STOLEN SPARKLERS.
They are Found at Huntington,.W. Va.,
and the Alleged Thief Is Arrested.
Huntington, W. Va., Oct. 5. —After
working secretly for six months Chief
of Police Davis, of this city, has un
earthed diamonds valued at $(>.500,
stolen from Mrs. Theodore A. Piatt at
New Orleans during Mardi Gras last
March. The diamonds were taken
from the Piatt home while the family
were attending the Mardi Gras festivi
ties. Simultaneously Walter Piatt, a
nephew of the owner of the diamonds,
disappeared. Early in April the young
man was heard of in St. Louis, then
Cincinnati, later in Huntington.
Chief Davis last night secured part
of the stolen jewels and arrested Wal
ter Piatt, to await the arrival of his
aunt from New Orleans.
Se«en Men Missing.
Oklahoma City, O. T., Oct. 5. —
Seven men are missing of a party of
eight, who -vent down with the wagon
bridge between Lexington and Purcell
after battling with the swift rush of
waters for many hours in a vain at
tempt to prevent the bridge from go
ing :.nt.
Sculptor Bartholdi Dies.
Paris, Oct. 5. —Frederick "Augustc
Bartholdi, the sculptor of the statue
of Liberty in New York bay, died yes
terday at his residence in Paris. The
cause of his d6iith was tuberculosis
and he had been bedridden since May.
CAMERON COUNTY PRESS, THURSDAY, OCTOBER 13, 1904.
ON HIS REGULAR ROUNDS.
>< i > /. -it 1811
v"
'f/ t -
" Chicago Chronicle.
Miss Columbia—Go Away; How Many Times Must I Tell You That I Have
Nothing for You?
TRAINED BY DAVID HILL.
Serious Accusations Brought Against
Parker by Populist Candidate
for President.
Thomas E. Watson, populist candi
date for president, is a literary man,
having written several books which
have had wide circulation. His pro
ficiency in the use of words to ex
press ideas is manifest on the stump
as well as in his published works.
One phrase which Mr. Watson em
ploys, and which is particularly ex
pressive, calls Judge Parker "Hill's
favorite pupil." The interesting part
of this appellation is its truth. As
Watson says: "Trained for 20 years
in the school of Dave Hill, it would
be a marvel indeed if the favorite pu
pil did not somewhat resemble the
master who taught him."
But the populist leader goes farther.
He charges that Parker is not only
the favorite pupil of David B. Hill,
but that he is also the stalking horse
of the corporations. With plain
speech Watson says of corporate in
fluences in the Parker campaign:
"What has been promised the Stan
dard Oil company thai its New York
agent, Pat McCarren, should have
given the greater part of his time lor
two years to the Parker campaign?
What has been promised to Belmont
that lie should have been so active in
personal work and so lavish in finan
cing the Parker campaign during the
last two years? What do these greedy
corporation hordes expect, from Par
ker? Are they doing this simply for
health and pleasure, or is it a matter
of business with them? It is high
time that the people of this country
woke up to the fact that corporate
interests represented by Belmont, Pat
McCarren, Lamont, Gorman, Carlisle
and Olney arc not in the habit of
spending their time and their money
on any candidate unless they have
good teason to believe that they will
get value received."
Again, this plain spoken populist
declares that Parker is "a false pre
tense, a dodger, a trimmer, who is
willing to get if he can the votes of
those who would never support him
if he were to say in plain English just
what his convictions are."
That is quite a series of accusations
to bring against, a candidate firr the
presidency: First, that he is the fa
vorite pupil of David B. Hill; second,
that, he is the instrument of corporate
influences, and Third, that ha is a
trimmer who is willing to suppress
his views in order to get votes. This
is not a description formulated by re
publicans. but by another party and
by the candidate of that party for the
highest office in the nation.
The Troy Times concludes that such
a candidate, nominated by the demo
crats and willing, after the St. Louis
convention had agreed to hold the
money question in abeyance, to insult
free silver men with whom he had
voted for eight years by sending a
telegram to catch the gold democratic
vote, it is not surprising that the old
Bryan democrats are in revolt against
Parker. It is a conservative estimate
that the populists will get 25,000 votes
In Uew York state this year, ami
these will be cast by democrats who
are opposed to the influences that ar?
behind Judge Parker and to the weak
ness and shiftiness which his candi
dacy has developed.
itt-Roosevelt's letter of acceptance
reads like a loaded Catling gun in ac
tion, and his political enemies are now
busy counting the holes it has. made in
their labor pretensions. It is pretty
hard to fight substance with shadow. —
Troy Labor Advocate.
t:?New York democrats are so deter
mined on harmony that they are willing
to fight for it.—Toledo Blade.
O'Tho democratic campaign is not
making a serious impression anywhere,
so far as we can find out. Tom Tag
gart. may be a ;\p tl man in Indiana,
but he has not « .>.plured New York.
August Belmont may be a great man
in Wall street, but his influence is not
large elsewhere. According to the best
information we can obtain there never
was a national campaign so botched
as this one is by the conceited little
great men who are responsible for iti
management.—-Boston Herald.
CARRIES NO CONVICTION.
Judge Parker's Latest Utterance
Shows That He Has No Hope
of Being Elected.
Hon. Alton B. Parker's letter accepting
the democratic nomination for the pres
idency is even more remarkable than
his speech to the notification committee
at Esopus.
As regards the democratic past, he
enters a plea of guilty, with some ex
tenuating circumstances. Concerning
the democratic future, especially dur
ing the four years from next March 4,
he again lays emphasis upon the fact
that the United States senate is cer
tain to remain republican, and there
fore the democrats would be unable to
do much national harm in case of a
democratic victory next November.
In a nutshell, Judge Parker declares
that the gold standard must remain
inviolate; that the tariff must not be
tinkered with if by such tinkering busi
ness conditions are to be disturbed;
that in his belief the existing laws for
the regulation of trusts are adequate;
that the Panama canal must be built
and quickly, along the route selected;
that civil service reform in the govern
mental service is here to stay.
In what wise does the position of
Judge Parker differ from that of the
republican party upon these questions?
As regards the Philippines, he would
give them a promise of independence
as soon as the natives "are reasonably
prepared for it." How gloriously in
definite this sounds, when coming from
a man to whom the democratic hosts
have looked for constructive leader
ship! And how gloriously impractica
ble such a promise seems at the present
time!
Surely, says the Chicago Inter-Ocean,
Hon. Alton 13. Parker's letter is no
bugle call, it is no summons to aggres
sive action. It does not betray hope
It does not inspire confidence. Its pre
vailing tone Is one of resignation. In
a word, it seems to have been written
largely to keep the record clear.
A candidate who puts forth such a
document certainly can have no strong
expectation of victory.
Figures That Do Not Lie.
There were, according to the census,
29,074,117 persons engaged in gainful
occupations in 1000. There must be ful
ly 35',500,000 now. The income of these
people will certainly average over $2 a
day. or $20,000,000,000 annually alto
gether. The sum is probably nearer
twice that amount. But suppose we
were to lower our tariff or abolish it as
the free traders wish, our incomes would
certainly be cut into and reduced by at
least $10,000,000,000 a year. In ten years
that would be a sum equal to our total
wealth. Think of what the loss oi
$10,000,000,000 a year in incomes means
No wonder the great majority of the
people want to let well enough alone,
and put off revision either up or down
til] some ye: rs hence.
Growth of Our Export Trade.
For the lirst time in the history of the
country the exports of manufactures
have exceeded these of agriculural prod
ucts. The exports of iron, steel and cop
per have had a most remarkable growth
during a period of 31 years. In 1870 the
exports of iron and steel were only $13,-
000,000, while this year they have
reached $111,948,586. Copper has risen
from $500,000 to $57,000,000 since that
time ; mineral oils have increased from
$30,000,000 to $72,000,000; leather from
less than $1,000,000 to $33,000,000; cot
ton manufactures from less than $1,000,-
000 to $22,000,000; agricultural imple
ments, from $1,000,000 to over $22,000,-
000.
c Taggart declares Illinois is debata
ble ground. Perhaps the chairman is
.still talking in his slet p.—Chicago Post
c (';> to tin- present time, however.se
far as \\< can judge. Gen. Chaos Is still
in command of the democratic forces.—
Harper's Weekly.
C Mr. H-yan's oratoric effectiveness
is likely in be diminished by the neces
sity of explaining why lie issupportlnf
the Parker-Davis ticket.—Washington
Star.
c ■" Every one on the democratic barn
wagon,'' remarked the Observer o
Events and Things, "seems to be playiii;
a different tune."—Yonkers Statesman
i »AHY PRELATES ARE PRESENT
TRIENNIAL CONVENTION OF THE
EPISCOPAL CHURCH.
Many Important Questions Will be De
cided Archbishop of Canterbury
Delivers a Message to the
American Church.
Boston, Oct. o.—Prelates from five
continents and from distant islands oI
the sea, representatives of the Angli
can communion throughout the world,
participated in the opening cere,
monies of the triennial general con.
vention of the Episcopal church in the
United States in this city Wednesday.
For the first time in ecclesiastical his,
tory the Archbishop of Canterbury,
primate of all England, was present at
a formal assembly of the American
Episcopal body, lie was received with
all the honors due his rank and as the
guest of the American church was ac
corded a hearty welcome by four score
bishops of domestic dioceses.
/112 \
if 1'
/Jiff Wf 112
j
Archbishop of Canterbury.
The convention is regarded as the
most important, ever held by the Epis
copal denomination. The proposed
legislation embraces questions of
moral reform, alterations in the eccle
siastical administration and even a
change in the name of the church it
self.
Boston, Oct. 7. —The Archbishop of
Canterbury, speaking before a joint
session of the house of bishops and
house of deputies of the Episcopal
church at Emanuel church yesterday,
delivered a message to the American
body in which he urged that the
church take steps to guard the re
ligious life of the home.
After reporting against a change in
the legal name of the church at this
time, the committee appointed by the
last convention to consider the matter
was discharged.
A GREAT RACE.
Sweet Marie Won the Transylvania
Stake, in Which Several Records
Were Smashed.
Lexington, Ky., Oct. 7. —Tho Tran
sylvania for 2:12 class trotters, value
$5,000, yesterday resulted in possibly
the greatest contest in the history of
the trotting turf and was won by
Sweet Mario in tho three final heats,
the first two heats going to Tiverton.
Four world's records were made in the
Transylvania, besides lowering the
event record and making the fastest
mile of the year on any track. When
Tiverton won the first heat, in 2:05%
he lowered the event record and made
the fastest trotting record of any
horse this year. When he won the
second heat in 2:0-1 Mi he again low
ered these records and made the
world's record for the fastest second
heat in a race.
Sweet. Marie won the third heat in
2:05. This established a world's rec
ord for the three fastest heats ever
trotted in a race, and her mark is a
world's record for the fastest third
heat ever trotted in a race. Sweet
Marie won the fourth heat in 2:08 1 „£
and the fifth heat in 2:09, thus estab
lishing a world's record for the five
fastest heats ever trotted in a race.
WAS SOLO AT AUCTION.
The International Mercantile Agency
Is Bought by a Philadelphian for
$26,000.
New York, Oct. 7—The $3,000,000
International Mercantile Agency was
sold at public auction yesterday for
$20,000. The sale was conducted by
George R. Beach, appointed receiver
of the company by Judge Lannon, of
the United States circuit court at
Trenton, N. J., about six weeks ago.
Receiver Beach started the auctioi
by putting up the reports of the finan
cial standing of tens of thousands of
firms throughout the United States
and Canada. These were supposed to
have cost $1,200,000 to collect. The
highest bid was $lO.
Mr. Beach refused to accept this bid
and revised his plan for conducting
the sale, dividing the property into
two lots. In the first lot everything
belonging to the company except tho
outstanding accounts was included.
The second lot consisted of the ac
counts due.
The first lot was sold to Charles H.
Barritt, of Philadelphia, for $23,000,
and the second lot to the same pur
chaser for $3,000.
A New Feature in Railroading.
Omaha, Oct. 7. —The Union Pacific
railroad yesterday began serving news
bulletins on its passenger trains be
tween Omaha and San Francisco. Tho
bulletins are served to eight trains
daily.
Steamer Struck a Reef.
Vancouver, B. G\. Oct. 7.—News was
brought here Thursday that during a
fog Wednesday night the steamer Bos
cowiz struck a reef on Harble Down
island. Four children were drowned.
The crow and 185 other passengers
were saved. The Boscowiz was run
ning from Vancouver to northern
British Columbian ports and had on
board nearly 200 Indian passengers
bound for various settlements up the
coast. The passengers were taker
ashore and tho drowning of the fou:
| "hildrea occurred in connection witl
1 (he launching of a suiall boat.
THOUGHT SHE WOULD DIE.
Mrs. S W. Marine, of Colorado Springs,
Began to Fear the Worst. Doan's
Kidney Pills Saved Her.
Mrs. Sarah Marine, of 428 St. Urnin
bepan to fear that I would never get
well. A friend advised me to try Doan's
Kidney Pills. Within a week after 1
began using them I was so much better
that I decided to keep up the treat
ment., and when I had used a little over
two boxes I was entirely well. I have
now enjoyed the best of health for
more than four months, and words can
but poorly express my gratitude."
For sale by alldealers. Price 50cents.
Foster-Milburn Co., Buffalo, N. Y.
It Cures Colds, Coutrhs, Sore Throat, Cronp, Infln
enzn. Whooping Cough, Bronchitis ami Antlima.
A certain cure for Consumption in first stamen,
and a pure relief in advanced stages. Use nt, once.
Yon will see the excellent effect al'Br tukini; the
flr«t dose. Sold by dealers everyvvjexe. Lugo
bottles i 5 cents and SO cents.
NEW HOTEL IS A PALAGE.
Hostelry in New York City Bul/t and
Furnished Without Regard to Cost.
The Hotel St. Regis, another new
world palace planned to shelter va
grant multimillionaires, has opened
its doors in New York city. John Ja
cob Astor is the owner of the new
hotel and It. M. Haan is proprietor
The 18 stories are furnished with a.
splendor unprecedented. Tho eorri
dors are of marble and the walls are
hung with silks that vary in price
from $" to $1.") a yard, and the mutaj
fittings in the bathrooms are of solid
silver.
The table linen came from Belfast,
the heavy embroidered bed linen from
Dresden, the china from the; Roya!
Worcester anil Minton factories, aad
the carpets were woven in France'
from special designs to suit every
apartment.
There is a library of 2,150 volumes'
for the patrons. There are devices
for regulating tho heat by which an>
temperature desired may be attained
Cool air also may be introduced
Clocks are on every mantel, run from
a magnetic clock in the office, and
pantries are on every floor in whiefe
breakfasts are prepared.
The state suite excels in magnifi.
cence any of the other apartments.
It consists of a dining room in Cir
cassian walnut, wainscoted to the
ceiling, decorated with silver, bronze
ornaments, formerly the property of
the king of Sicily. Prices range from
seven dollars a day for room and batt".
to stl!s a day for the state suite
The hotel, exclusive of furniture;,
cost $4,000,000. The furniture cost
another $1,500,000.
CAN DRINK TROUBLE:.
That's One Way to Get It,
Although they won't admit it. many
people who suffer from sick headache?
and other ails get them straight fron
the coffee they drink and it in easily
proved if they're not afraid to leave V
to a test as in the case of a lady in
Connellsviile.
"I had been a sufferer from sit:
headaches for twenty-five years ul".
anyone who has ever had a bad sin .
headache knows what I sufferer..
Sometimes three days in the week i
would have to remain in bed, at otlu r
times 1 couldn't lie down the pain
would be so great. .My life was a to.<
ture and if I went away from turn,
for a day I always came back mine
dead than alive.
"One day 1 was telling a woman &:•>
troubles and she told me site knew
that it was probably coffee caused it,
She said she had been cured by stoj
ping coffee and using Postum Food
Coffee and urged nie to try this food
drink.
"That's how I came to send out. ami
get some Postum and from that tJnn
I've never been without it for it eujis
my taste and lias entirely cured ;i)l
of my old troubles. All I did was ta
leave off the toffee and tea and drin,
well made Postum in its place. Tl.k
change has done nie more good Hier
everything else put together.
"Our house vas like u drug store. J< ?
my husband bought everything h<
heard of to help me without dolm
any good but when I began on the
Postum my headaches ceased and tfc
other troubles quickly disappeared. )
have a friend who had an experienco
just like mine and Postum cured tin
just as it did me.
"Postum not only cured the head
aches but my general health hast tx < r.
improved and I am much strong*,
than before. I now enjoy delicion*
Postum more than 1 ever did coffee.'''
Vame given by Postum Co., Batt)«
3reek, Mich.
"There's a reason" and it.'e mrtli
aiding out.