Cameron County press. (Emporium, Cameron County, Pa.) 1866-1922, October 11, 1906, Page 2, Image 2

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    2
CAMERON COUNTY PRESS.
H. H. MULLIN, Editor
Published Every Thursday.
TERMS OF SUBSCRIPTION.
year M 00
tf paid In advanoo 1 *0
ADVERTISING RATES:
Advertisements are published at the rata of
#ri< duhar per square forone insertion and fift>
cents per squ.ii.- for each subsequent insertion
Kates by the year, or {or six or three months,
%tc lon a.id uii form, and will be furnished
application.
!.• -ill and Official Advertising per square
tli'-c Hint's or li ss, ■ each aubsequeni inbfii
t.n i . <j tents per squr.re.
ttl notices In cents per line for one inscr
■ r.i< n: n cents per line for each subsequent!
t • ecutive insertion.
auary not!', t-s over five lines 10 cents pot
l.:i Simple t uonn -ements of births, mat •
r imi I'.euths w il be inserted free.
lues , i rds, lite lines or less. If> per year,
c i ve lit. - ;.t the roguiur rates of a.iver
i - ug.
. local inserted for less than 75 cents pei
Iss-jo.
JOB PRINTING.
'Hip Job rt men t of the I'rf.ss is complete
• '! -it 1 ■ til ie*. for doltit; the best class of
: I. . I l.'t.Aß JkT'tkN I JuN PAID TO LAW
PI.ISTIN-'.
N.i p. r will bi discontinued until arrear
< ar>- pal i, except at the option ot tho pub
lisher.
j't.ners sf: t u; of the county must bo Dald
for ~*■ a tta. ee.
A Fool and His Money.
The credulity of a multitude oi
more or less thrifty people, who, in
their mania for money, are ready to
believe that they can amass fortunes
over night, makes them the easy prey
of a swarm of parasites who infest
the financial districts. The gospel
cf the parasites, who build air castles
for their victims and real castles for
themselves, is terse: I. "A fool is
born every minute." 11. "A fool and
his money are easily parted." Posing
as bankers and brokers, the financial
parasites scour the country for the
fools and then exercise their nimble
wits in devising schemes to accom
plish the partition. How many mil
lions of dollars are parted from the
fools every year may be conjectured
from the millions of dollars spent by
the pseudo financiers in advertising.
The bulk of the financial advertising
in the leading newspapers of the
country is intended for the fools. An
other index of the richness of the
harvest of parting money from the
fools, says Frank Fayant, in Success
Magazine, is the occasional exposure
of some particularly glaring and
bungled imposture, when the calcula
ble "swag" runs into the hundreds of
thousands, if not into the millions.
But these frauds are seldom exposed,
for the victims are usually as anxious
as the victiipizers to escape the lime
light of publicity. Most men prefer
to lose their money rather than hear
their neighbors quote from the para
sites' gospel, "A fool and his money
are soon parted."
Simple Life Natural in Japan.
Many of us dream of the simple
life. Some strive for it; few attain
it. An eminent author has said only
those with great wealth and enormous
strength can live it. With the Jap
anese this is so. The simplicity of
their daily existence has been culti
vated until it is an art. Each man's
status in society is definitely fixed.
It is the grade in which his forefa
thers lived and in which his children's
children will live. There is no striv
ing for a higher place. Me is satis
fied with his position, accents it as a
matter of course, and makes the most
of it. Only by some overt evil act
will he drop into a lower grade, and it
must be a phenomenal deed or oervice
to the state that will raise him even
one degree higher in social rank.
This stability of position has an im
portant influence upon the nation. No
one wishes to appear different from
what he really is, and as a conse
quence there is no greed for wealth.
You will say this must kill ambition.
If ambition is a struggle solely for
money and position, then it does kill
ambition, but it does not kill ambi
tion to excel in one's own craft or call
ing. . . The fact that a Japanese
is content in his own sphere, says
the Craftsman, is the keynote of the
success of their simple life. It is of
no value for him to make a false im
pression, so the element of show or
P".sh is left out.
Tho state of Washington has made
an advance in the line of social reform
by having arrested and indicted for
manslaughter a young man who suc
ceeded in drowning some of his friends
by vigorously rocking the boat in
which he and they were taking a
short water trip. This is a form of
homicide by means of which a great
many people have in years past been
brought to an untimely end. It is,
of course, a case of idiocy on the part
of the boat rocker, who always looks
upon tiie act as a humorous proceed
ing, but, says the Boston Herald, in
view of the past experiences the au
thorities of the state of Washington
are no doubt justified in taking the
initiative in declaring that this form
of lif" taking lias ceased tea be tol
erated as a joke, and that those who
willfully indulge in the sport must
be held to a criminal accountability
if for any reason it results in loss
orf life.
What does the king of England
think of this improved spelling? "The
first diplomat of Europe" will hardly
commit, himself on anything more fun
damental than trousers. And these
jcannot be concealed.
BRYAN ON ISSUES.
TRYING TO FIND SOMETHING
SAFER THAN THE TARIFF.
Would Be Glad to Use War on Wealth
ar>rl Government Ownership of
Railroads as Substitutes for
the Always Dangerous Ad
vocacy of Free
Trade.
One-twelfth of Mr. Bryan's spocon in
Madison Square garden on the night,
of August H> was devoted to the tar
iff. The other eleven-twelfths were
taken up wiiii the effort to frame is
sues that may override the tariff
issue in the campaign of 11)08. With
the tariff as a paramount issue-, the
Democrats have not fared well in
presidential elections. They would
greatly prefer some other issue. Mr.
Bryan has been trying to find one.
In his search he has uncovered some
rather dizzy substitutes for the tar
iff as an issue. War on "predatory
wealth" and "death to plutocracy" is
one of them. Railroad rate regnia
tion through United States govern
ment ownership of other than trunk
lines is another issue which Mr.
Bryan hopes may obscure the tariff
issii". Doth propositions are suffi
ciently radical to divert attention
somewhat from the Democratic par
ty's hopelessly bad tariff record, pro
vided the party can be induced to
stand for so radical a departure in
the direction of socialism and cen
tralization. But there arc unmis
takable signs of revolt, especially
among the predatory plutocrats and
the -outhern Democrats. Already Mr.
Bryan perceives hi. -3 blunder, and in
hastening to give assurance that these
revolutionary ideas are his own mere
ly, and not intended for incorporation
in the national platform.
So, in time, Mr. Bryan will be com
pelled to get back to the tariff. There
will be little else left to talk about,
for the Republican party has shown
that railroad rates can be regulated
without confiscation or government
ownership, and that trust evils can
be remedied without disturbing pro
tection to American labor and indus
try. The Democratic nominee for 1908
promises to consider the tariff ques
tion more at length at an early day.
Assuredly he will. Being compelled
to abandon some of his startling radi
calisms lest he frighten away the sup
port that was unanimously his prior
to his speech of August 30, he will
have no choice but to fall back on
the tariff. flere he will bo on fa
miliar ground. Always a free trader,
always an enemy of the policy of pro
tection, and always certain of a sym
pathetic hearing on the subject, he
can safely launch his rhetorical thun
derbolts against any tariff designed to
foster domestic industrialism and do
mestic wage paying. Mr. Bryan's
line of procedure on the tariff ques
tion was distinctly marked out when
in his speech at Madison Square gar
den he said:
"The tariff question is vory closely
allied to the trust question, and the
reduction of the tariff furnishes an
easy means of -limiting the extortion
which the trusts can practice. While
absolute free trade would not neces
sarily make a trust impossible, still
it is probable that very few manufac
turing establishments would dare to
enter into a trust if the president were
empowered to put upon the free list
articles competing with those con
trolled by a trust. While I shall take
occasion at an early day to consider
the tariff question more at length, I
caimot permit this opportunity to pass
without expressing the opinion that
the principle embodied in the protec
tive tariff has been the fruitful source
of a great, deal of political corruption
as well as the support of many of our
most iniquitous t.'rusts.
"it is difficult to condemn the man
ufacturers for uniting to take advan
tage of a high tariff schedule when
the schedule is framed on the theory
that the industries need all the pro
tection given, and it is not likely that
the beneficiaries of these schedules
wiil consent to their reduction so long
as the public waits for the tariff to
be reformed by its friends.
"But one of the worst features of a
tariff levied not for revenue, but for
the avowed purpose of protection, is
that it fosters the idea that men
should use their votes to advance their
own financial interests.
"The manufacturer has been as
sured that it is legitimate for him
to vote for congressmen who, what
ever else their opinions on other sub
jects may be, will legislate larger div
idends into his pockets; sheep grow
ers have been encouraged to believe
that they should have no higher aim
in voting than to raise the price of
wool; and laboring men have been
urged to make their wages their only
concern. For a generation the 'fat*
has been fried out of the mani;fac
turers by the Republican campaign
committee, and then the manufac
turers have been reimbursed by leg
islation".
"With the public conscience edu
cated to believe that this open pur
chase of legislation was entirely prop
er, no wonder that insurance com
panies have used the money of their
policy holders to carry elections—no
wonder that trusts have hastened to
purchase immunity from punishment
with liberal donations! How can we
draw a moral distinction between the
man who sells his vote for five dollars
011 election day and the manufacturer
who sells his political influence for
$50,000 or SIOO,OOO, payable in divi
dends? How can we Aaw a moral
line between the senator or represent
ative elected by the trusts to pre
vent hostile legislation and the sen
CAMERON COUNTY PRESS, THURSDAY, OCTOBER 11, 1906.
ator or representative kept in con
gress by the manufacturers to se
cure friendly legislation? The party
which justifies the one form of brib
ery cannot be relied upon to condemn
the other.
"There never was a time when tar
iff reform could . more easily en
tered upon, for the manufacturers by
selling abroad cheaper than at home,
as many of them do, have not ojily
shown the ingratitude toward those
who built the tariff wall for them,
' lit they have demonstrated their abil
ity to soli in competition with the
world. The high tariff has long been
a burden to the consumers in the
United States, and it is growing more
and more a menace to our foreign
commerce, because it arouses resant
ment and provokes retaliation."
The leopard has not changed his
spots. The Bryan who helped to
frame a free trade tariff bill as a
member of the house committee on
ways and means in 1904 is the same
Free Trade Bryan in 1906. The tar
ill' will be the paramount issue in 190b.
A CONTRIBUTORY CAUSE.
Benefits Reaped by Farmer as Result
of Protective Tariff.
It is well to mention occasionally,
as Speaker Cannon did at Danville,
that under the Republican protective
policy the United States now produce:-,
a third of the world's manufactures
and agricultural products. Some
Democrats declare that the tariff
never helps the farmer. They arc
r.'K'h in making any such assertion.
This gives the Republicans a chance
to show that the diversification of in
dustries which the tariff has created
l as raised up a home market for the
farmer which has advanced the va'ue
of everything which he has to sell,
whfle the competition among the fac
tories lias cheapened everything that
the farmer has to buy. This is the
principal reason why farming is far
more profitable now than it was in the
Democratic days before the civil war.
Farming is far more profitable, like
wise, than it was in the Democratic
days of 1893-97, when the country had
its latest and severest financial panic.
In speaking of the country's pros
perity from any viewpoint the tariff
is sure to present itself as a contribu
tory cause of the good times. Under
Democratic sway, in Buchanan's days,
the aggregate of the country's manu
factures was slight. This was an ag
ricultural country almost solely at
that time. As a consequence the
farmer got less for his products than
he does now. Our manufactured arti
cles in those days were furnished by
England chiefly, and the American
farmer and the rest of the American
consumers paid more for them than
they do now for the home product.
The tariff has benefited producer and
consumers. There are more wage'
workers in proportion to the aggre
gate population in 1906 than thera
were in IS6O, the last year of Demo
cratic power prior to the civil war,
There are more wage-workers than
there were in 1896, the last year of
the last term of the last Democratic
president. The wages in each case
have made great advances. Here are
some of the reasons why the Repub
licans in the campaigns of 1906 and
1908 will champion the maintenance
of a tariff which will give adequate
protection to every American product
which needs protection. Speaker Can
non at Danville gave excellent reasons
why the American people will, in 1906,
elect a Republican congress to con
tinue the magnificent work which is
being done by the Republican plifty.—
St. Louis Globe-Democrat.
When Stand-Patters Will Be Needed
There is meat for than Demo
crats in what was said about "stand
ing pat" by Cato Sells in his speech
as permanent chairman of the lowa
Democratic convention:
"I am a stand-pat Democrat. If 1
were a Republican, 1 should be a
stand-patter. The man who gets away
from the doctrinal principles of his
party will either have to get into the
other party or become a mongrel.
The Methodist who talks the Presby
terian language won't last over night
and the man who out-Herods Ilerod
and is a friend of protection and then
proceeds to make a free trade speech
will not recognize his own party when
their convention is held in 1908."
It is not a very far cry to 1908, but
it is far enough to give time and op
portunlly for a very considerable num
ber of people to recall the fact that
'bey are after all Republicans and pro
tectionists, and thac the proper place
for them is back in the ranks with the
rest of the protectionists. It is a safe
prediction that in the red-hot cam
paign against Bryan and Bryanism
that will be raging two years hence
"stand-patter" will have ceasfcd to be
a term of reproach. Stand-patters will
then be in great demand. They will
be needed.
Let It Alone.
Possibly some of the schedules of
the Dingley tariff carry a higher rate
of duty than is needed by the indus
tries which they were designed to pro
tect. That may to a limited extent
be true at the present moment. But
it may not be true next year. Indus
trial depression throughout Europe
would leave a huge surplus to be mar
keted abroad at cut prices. In that
event the present tariff would not be
higher than needed. It might, indeed,
prove to be too low. It is at present
too low on many articles. But protec
tionists do not ask for tariff revision
on that account. They realize that
tariffs cannot be quickly changed to
meet constantly changing conditions.
So they say, let the tariff alone. Need
lessly high schedules can do no harm,
whereas inadequately low schedules
would do a world of harm.
AN EASY VICTORY.
New York Riflemen Defeat Britons
in a Contest on the Creedmoor
Range.
Creedmoor, L. I.—The silver chal
lenge shield donated by Col. Sir
Howard Vincent, aide-de-camp to King
F.ihvrd VII., will remain on this side
of Hie Atlantic for two or perhaps
three years. The rifle shooting teams
of the Seventh regiment, N. G. N. Y.,
won the trophy in decisive fashion
here Wednesday from the Queen's
Westminster Volunteers, of London,
whom they defeated by a marign of 60
points.
The total scores of each team over
the ">OO, t>oo, 800 and 1,000-yard ranges
were: Seventh regiment 1,648,
Queen's Westminster Volunteers 1,588.
When the match was inaugurated
last year at Bisley, England, the Brit
ish team won by a margin of ten
points. On the shorter ranges—soo
and 600 yards—the American marks
men were five points ahead, but the
following day the Englishmen forged
ahead 011 the two longer ranges and
won out.
On Tuesday the Seventh regiment
team was ?A points ahead of the visit
ors on the short ranges. Yesterday at
800 yards both teams tied with totals
of 406, but at 1,000 yards the local
shooters outclassed their opponents
and heat them by 26 points.
Corporal A. G. Fulton, of the Volun
teers, who is only 19 years old, made
the remarkable score of 277 for the
four ranges and had he secured a
bullseye 011 his final shot, at 1,000
yards he would have won the silver
cup presented by Capt. Francis G.
Landon for the highest individual
score. He only made three 011 his last
shot and the special individual prize
went to Seregant W. H. Short, o:i the
Seventh regiment, who was high man
with 278.
REBELS ARE DISARMING.
Cuban Insurgents Are Not Slow in
Surrendering Their Weapons.
Havana, Cuba. —The alacrity with
which the rebels are laying down their
arms to the commission appointed to
superintend that important phase of
the termination of the revolution is
the greatest surprise the provisional
government has yet encountered in its
program. This operation is now well
under way in the vicinity of Havana,
700 of Guerra's men with their horses
having already been entrained for
Pinar del Rio, while one brigade
marched to Guanajay Wednesday
without a sign of disorder.
Hundreds of persons from Havana
went out to Santiago de las Vegas and
Rincon to view the disarmament.
They were disappointed at not seeing
the rebels actually surrender their
guns, but nevertheless they witnessed
an interesting sight. As a concession
to the men Gen. Funston and Maj.
Ladd permitted them to take their
arms to Pinar del Rio, where, most of
the men joined the insurgent army.
The rifles, however, were first counted
by officers of marines and the men
will be required to surrender them be
fore leaving the train at Pinar del Rio.
Recording to the testimony of an
American named Harvey, formerly a
Roosevelt Rough Rider, who has been
with the insurgents, the amount of
actual fighting during the revolution
was really very small. Harvey says
that most of the fighting he had seen
was between game cocks. About 10
per cent, of Guerra's men carry fight
ing cocks tied to their saddles.
Gov. Taft now occupies the office in
which the affairs of Cuba have been
administered successively by the
Spanish governors of the island. Gen.
Leonard Wood and President Palma.
He established himself in these quar
ters yesterday. He will take up his
residence in the palace in a few days.
MURDEROUS THIEVES.
They Killed a Banker and Stole $5,000
in Gold.
San Francisco, Cal.—Two robbers
entered the Kimmon Ginko. a Jap
anese bank also known as the Golden
Gate bank, at 1588 O'Farrell street
Wednesday and after fatally beating
S. Urakata, the manager of the bank,
and seriously injuring A. Sasseki, a
clerk, with a piece of gas pipe, escap
ed with $5,000 in gold. Manager Ura
kata died two hours later. Urakata
was acting as teller of the bank.
After striking down their victii 13,
the robbers dragged them to a pooily
lighted room in the rear of '.he bank.
There the prostrate forms of the men
were found later. The unconscious
men were lying in a pool of blood that
streamed from their wounds and near
by was a piece of gas pipe, a foot in
length.
The robbers chose a time when
there were but few persons transact
ing business in the bank and the sen
sational and bold deed was 30 quickly
effected that it was all over before
the crowd of people passing the doors
of the institution were aware of what
had taken place. While one of the
holdup men engaged the paying teller
of the bank, the other walked to the
rear of the bank and going behind the
counter, picked up a sack containing
$5,000. The action of the robber who
went to the rear of the bank was wit
nessed by Sasseki, the clerk, who im
mediately raised a cry of alarm. The
cry had scarcely left his lips before
he was struck down by the man who
was carrying out the gold.
Seventy-five Miners are Entombed.
Bluefield, W. Va. —As the result of
an explosion Wednesday at the
West Fork mines of the Pocahontas
Collieries Co., where the explosion of
1902 occurred, in which Superintend
ent O'Malley and 16 others lost their
lives, 75 men are supposed to be en
tombed.
Georgia's Election.
Atlanta, Ga. —The state election
held in Georgia on Wednesday
resulted in the practical unanimous
election of the democratic nominees,
headed by Hoke Smith for governor.
Breaking the Compact.
Miffkins (to employer)--No, sir, i
don't tliink there's anything unreaso*-
able in my asking'for an increase of
my salary. You may remember you
promised me a rise when I had been
with you a year.
Employer—l know I did, but, hang
it all, didn't I make it conditional upon
your giving me every satisfaction?
Miffkins —And in what way, sir,
aaven't 1 given you satisfaction?
Employer (furiously)— Satisfaction,
indeed! D'you call bothering me for
more wages giving me every satisfac
tion, eh?
Brilliant Idea.
Hyker—Tapeleigh, the dry goods
man, has a scheme that keeps his
store filled with customers.
l'yker—Advertising scheme, eh?
Hyker—No, not exactly, ile keeps
a parrot just inside the door that ex
claims, "Oh, .what a pretty young
lady!" every time a woman comes
along—find, of course, the woman can't
resist the temptation togo in and buv
something.—Chicago Daily News.
Looking Forward.
The young man had just screwed
up his courage to the point of asking
the old rnan for the hand of his daugh
ter in marriage.
"Have you given any thought to the
future?" asked the old man.
"Oh, yes," answered the young man,
"I joined the church last winter.'
Chicago Daily News.
•Statecraft.
"Tell the press censor to exercise
more than ordinary vigilance over all
the publications that come into the
palace," said the czar.
"For any npccial reaoon, your maj
esty ?"
"Yea. Th® fortune teller has warned
me that 1 am liable to hear some bad
news.—Washington Star.
Expecting a Call.
"Dear," said the physician's wife,
"when can you let me have ten dol
lars?"
"Well," replied the medical man,
"I h-ope to cash a draft shortly."
"Cash a draft? What draft?"
'The one 1 saw old Mr. Jenkins sit
ting in this morning."—Philadelphia
Pregs.
Not Encouraging.
"I have called," said the party with
the unbarbered hair, "to see if there
Is a vacancy in your joke depart
ment."
"There will be," replied the busy
editor, "as soon as the office boy gets
time to empty the waste basket."—
Chicago Daily News.
6KIDOO.
He—l asked her to tell me her age,
and she said "twenty-three."
She —Well —did you? Brooklyn
Life.
What?
The summer girl who wears her heart
Upon her sleeve in pleasure mute,
\Vhat t does she with it when she bathes
In her scant, sleeveless bathing suit?
Explained.
"Your summer vacation must have
agreed with you."
"What makes you think so?"
"You're so much fatter."
"No, I'm not. I probably look fat
ter because I'm so much shorter."—
Cleveland Leader.
Something Else Just as Good.
"1 want something to drink that
will cure the hiccoughs."
"Haven't any of it in stock," replied
the bartender, "but I've got some good
old stuff here that will produce hic
coughs."—Houston Post.
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Sometimes needs a reliable
monthly regulating medicine.
J. DR. PEAL'S
PENNYROYAL piLLS,
JLTO prompt, safe and certain in result. The peno.
ine (Dr. Peal's) never disappoint. SI.OO per bon.
Sold by R. 0. Dodson, druggist; ..i
For Bill Heads,
Letter Heads,
Fine Commercial
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