Cameron County press. (Emporium, Cameron County, Pa.) 1866-1922, August 08, 1907, Page 2, Image 2

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    2
CAMERON COUNTY PRESS.
H. H. MUI.LIN, Ed.t<>r.
Published Every Thursday.
tkkms of subscription.
P( r year ....» S2 00
If paid iu advance 1 •*>
ADV::RTIS'.NG KATES:
Advert Isem<mi? , ore published at th rate of
cur d •! ar pur mi nr.* fnroii" insert inn and fifty
,per Miliar* for e;.eli subsrijurni insertion.
Rules hy tii" y ar. or ;■>.- • » th »* • month*.
*re low a .d ui:.form, ar.U will be furnished <»: i
• p; licat.on.
i atid Official Advertising per Mj iur -.
three times or le-s. *i: eaen .subsequent in.ser
tto i . 0 tents per >quar ••
Uo?al notices in cents per lino for one inser
ter.} HI: "» cents per line !or each subsequent
con ecutive insertion.
»' »itnary notiees over five lines. 10 cents per
lin*-. Sl:;.pie. iniiouncetnents of births, n:ar
t ti'l deaths w I Ik- ins* rted free.
Business e :rl.s. live lir.es or los>. ..*> per year;
«o » r live lints, at the regular rate , of adver
t s\ng.
No ioeal inserted for less than 75 cents per
i&toue.
JOB PRINTING.
The .lob department of the Piif.ss eompletA
-.ifT' i«i far iit for doiin,' the be.st ciu:.s of
W rk. I'VIMI' t I.Alt AT't'E.N 1 ll'N I'AIU'I J LAW
PKINTIXIi.
No paper will b- diseontinued until arrear
•n / s an paid, except at the option of the pub
lisher.
Papers sent > ut of the eounty mtist be paid
112 r in advance.
A Hearing Ear.
A busy doctor who had engager! a
young assistant was asked if he really
intended to entrust hitn with his
■cases. "Oh. no," he replied. "He will
listen to the patients, look sympa
thetic, and report to me in the fewest
possible words. A sick woman has to
talk just sn much, and 1 haven't time
to listen." The minister, the lawyer
and (he teacher might follow the doc
tor's example, and employ a listening
'double" to their great relief, remarks
the Youth's Companion. In fact, it
may usually be found that the most
helpful person in the town is the one
who can listen best lo l K e complaints
.uid perplexities of the women-folk.
Self-expression is as necessary for the
welfare ct most women as food and
irink. The very talkative woman has
a silent husband—not simply because
she does not give him time to speak,
but because she was attracted to him
In the first place by his genius for
listening. However, there may be
something more than mere sell-Indul
gence in the habit of "talking things
out" wltli some appreciative listener.
The wisest of women know that they
get light on their own perplexities by
the art of putting them into words. A
mother is often her own best adviser
as to the training of he; child, when
she has once formulated his needs.
The remedy for the fault appears
when the fault is fairly describ d. So
the recourse to the listening ear is
not to be entirely decried. It is only
when continual talk breaks down the
proper barriers of reserve that the
lalking woman becomes a nuisance to
tic .- friends and a menace to her fam
ily. ii is pitiful to see (he condition
of silent misery to which a family is
reduced when one woman i:i it is a
chronic chatterer. "What were your
father's last words?" askc <1 a sympa
thetic neighbor of a little boy just
ber. aved. "lie didn't have any,"
gravely replied The child. Mother
was with him all the time!"
Small hoys will no doubt continue
tz. eat green fruit wiih no divrimina
tion as to kind or quantity Oi manner
of consumption. Forth 1 benefit of
less adventuresome adults, the depart
ment of agriculture informs us that
adequate mastication will prevent dis
astrous results from eating unripe
truit, and that the danger is less than
Is commonly supposed, especially
from gooseberries, plums, apples and
peats. This is in accord with the as
sertion of the poet that it was a little
green peach that made the trouble.
On ripe consideration, the Youth's
Companion feels constrained to ad
vise everybody of whatever age to es
chew all green fruit —eschew it 32
times.
Great Britain's employes' compensa
tion act has gone into effect, and
there is some doubt as to whether its
effects will be good or bad. Broadly
It provides that an employe incapaci
tated by accident shall receive 50 per
cent, of his usual wages while in
capacitated, but not to exceed live
dollars per week. For death the com
pensation is $750 to $1,500. It is
urged by some that it will prevent the
employment of persons whom age or
partial infirmity make especially lia
ble to accident, but that remains to be
seen. Many employers are taking out
insurance, which companies are issu
ing against loss under the law.
"Psychic epilepsy" has succeeded
brain storm as a medical term. A New
York physician has .just been cleared
of the charge of brutally assaulting a
man and woman on the street on the
plea that he had been subject to at
tacks of psychic epilepsy from child
hood, an<l that or recovery he had no
knowledge of what had occurred. Just
how the ailment differs from ordinary
epilepsy is not made clear, but it will
undoubtedly prove to be a convenient
malady in criminal procedure.
G. A. Keasier, the New Yorker who
has bought Riverside, Born© End, on
the Thames, where the Harvard crew
trained last fall, will spend $J 50,000
in renovating it. For one thing be will
putin 3,000 electric lights in the
house and grounds. The mansion will
be known hereafter as New York
Lodge.
GRATEFUL KAISER
HOW GERMANY'S RULER LOVES
THE UNITED STATES.
Keenly Appreciative of the Fact That
Cur Government Is Now Issuing to
German Exporters Cut Rates of Ad
mission to the American Market.
Jnst now the American ambassador
nt Berlin is the recipient of marked
favor and consideration at the hands
of the German emperor. Nearly 11
column of cabled matter in the New
York Times of June 26 is devoted to a
recital of the many courtesies and at
tentions which the kaiser is conspicu
ously bestowing upon our representa
tive at the Beren court. Mr. Charle
magne Tower is Icsk'c deep in clover,
what with preferred places at the im
perial elbow at lunches, dinners and
other festive occasions.
It would seem that Wilhelm I. can
not do too much to show how much
he loves America. Well, he cannot
do too much. He ought to love us a
whole lot. Certainly we have been
tremendously good to Germany of
| late.
Commencing with July 1, our gov
i eminent has begun the issue to Gor
man exporters of cut-rate tickets of
admission to the American market.
Only a few weeks ago our ambassa
dor to Germany, home on leave, con
stituted himself ambassador from
Germany and in a dinner speech told
the people of this country how kind
the f}< rmans were in consenting to
forego their proposed rank discrimina
tion against our products and in
granting us the full, normal protec
tive tariff rate instead of a tariff
marked up twice or three times above
the normal.
It, would seem to have been an "in
spired" speech, for not long after
came the conclusion of that astound
ing tariff agreement whereunder the
German exporters are permitted to
decide what duties they shall pay
upon entering their goods at United
States custom houses.
We should think the emperor would
Ibe nice to our ambassador. He ought
I to be.
It is not surprising to learn that
Wilhe.m regards .Mr. Roosevelt as the
| preatest of all American presidents.
| llow could he think otherwise? No
j American president lias ever done
: anything like so much for Germany.
| Somebody has said that republics are
j ungrateful.
Perhaps they are. But nobody who
: reads the news f.j.n Berlin can sa>
that monarchies are ungrateful. 1!'
' ever a monarch fairly slopped over
I with gratitude, and not without abun
i dant cause, that monarch is the Ger
j man kaiser at the present time.
That Useful Tariff Cudgel.
Speaking of tlie discovery by the
! Plate department of the forgotten law
of ISOO, authoiiziug the prohibition of
, imports from any country which un
! justly discriminates against the prod
j nets of the United States, the New
York Evening Post remarks:
"A useful tariff cudgel is what the
j experts term it. So it is useful, in
I the sense that a club in the hands of
| a policeman or the puller-in of a
Bowery clothing store might be. As
I between gentlemen, weapons of this
| kind are not in fashion, and though
I nations may not always behave like
| gentlemen, in the long run the armed
j bully is neither popular nor always
i successful in obtaining what In.-
| wants."
If the writer of this curious com
s ment was about to be held up in a
1 dark alley he would be mighty glad lo
j remember that he had with him a
j useful cudgel, and he would not hesi
i tate to use it. He would not regard it
: ps an affair "between gentlemen."
; Well, the L'nitcd States luis been held
up. Unfortunately oar gifted state
! department and our acquiescent treas
j ury department forgot all about the
1 useful cudgel of 1890, and allowed
j the Teutonic sandbagger togo through
j t i r m without resistance on their part.
! Another sandbagger. this one on the
v.v.stern bank of the Rhine, threatens
; another hold-up. lie, too, flourishes
I threateningly the maximum tariff
j sandbag. Will he, 100, be allowed to
got away with the hold-up? Or will the
useful cudgel of ISOO be brought into
action?
Characteristic.
In his recent speech before the
Pittsburgh chamber of commerce Gov.
Cummins said:
"I ant for tariff revision and for
tariff reduction as a measure of jus
tice to the buyers of protected com
modities. It seems to me that we
have gone mad in our zeal for the
seller and have abandoned the buyer
to the tender mercies of monopoly,
combination and greed."
Consideration for the consumer and
justice for the buyer is orthodox free
trade doctrine. The trouble with free
traders is that they fail to remember
that in our country 99 per cent, of the
consumers are also producers and 99
per cent, of the buyers are also sell
ers. With labor scarce, wages high,
savings banks deposits increasing at a
tremendous rate, and the per capita
wealth of the country mounting stead
ily upward year by year, it seems non
sensical to be spouting about the
abandonment of the buyer to the ten
der mercies of monopoly, combina
tion and greed; that is, it seems non
sensical for the Republican governor
of a great Republican state to be lal k
ing that way in such a hive of indus
try and production as Pittsburg.
Singular to relate, the man who talks
this free trade stuff is by some peo
ple still recognized as a Republican
[ £ml a protectionist!
CAMERON COUNTY PRESS, THURSDAY, AUGUST 8, 1907.
COULD NOT FACE THE FACTS. |
Agitators for Tariff Revision Are j
Heavily Handicapped.
The country has seemingly so much
to do and is so prosperous that the
tariff question has been lost sight of.
In some of the western states and in
Massachusetts political agitators have
worked during the past six years to
stir the people to a frenzied demand
for the lowering of import duties.
Their work appeared to be prompted
by political ambitions, but tariff tip
ping would not stand the debate.
Hence the men who made such a howl
about the tariff for a time have turned
their attention to other tilings. They
could not face the facts of a com
mere; growing at home and abroad.
No cause ran bo maintained before
tiro American people for any consid
eiable time unless it is a just cause.
Hence the death of the anti-tariff agi
tation. In lowa, where the so-called !
"lowa idea" was born, there is no- I
body at the present time advocating
the lowering of duties; they are even
silent on the reciprocity question.
Reciprocity Is a species of false pre
tense. In practice it means robbing and
betraying one line of industry for the
benefit of another. Reciprocity in one I
locality mt ana a trade for the benefit
ot that particular locality, regardless j
of whose industry is destroyed. For a
time reciprocity was popular, but when ■
the reciprocity of Massachusetts, !
which sought, to trade off the farmer,
met the reciprocity of lowa, which j
sought to trade off the manufacturer, !
there w;n surprise on both sides. And ;
both sides concluded they had better j
quit- The tariff for the present is a j
dead issue. The national Republican
convention, next year will declare un- I
equivocally for protection without J
apology; will also declare for reci
procity in non-competitive articles
only.—Des Moines Capital.
HOW UNCLE SAM WAS TIED UP.
u. jyiv
(i ■(
f|J |*n :
•' '• " \'-V IA I\\ *'
. i Fsy\j
President Fallieres —Tell me, my
dear friend, how you managed it.'
Kaiser Wilhelm —II was very easy;
much easier than 1 had dared to be
lieve. 1 told him that German export
ers were scrupulously honest in the
matter of valuations, and also intense
ly philanthropical iu their regard for
American interests, and that it was
' the study of their lives how best to
promote the labor and industry of his
country. He swallowed it all." —| Exit
incident and emperor laughing hi
lariously.]
Going It Blind.
1 With impressive unanimity the fre
-1 trade newspapers are directing atten
tion to the tariff revision resolution
adopted hy the National Association
1 of Manufacturers, as showing that the
t "mischievous effects" of the Dingley
' tariff upon their industries are begin
ning lo become apparent to the manu
facturers of the United States. We
wonder!
Delegates to large conventions sel
' dom do much of their own thinking.
The thinking is done for them by
' somebody else. Now, is it really a
fact that more than one out of ten of
; the rank and iile knew what they
were voting on when they adopted a
committee report calling for tariff re
vision at the earliest practicable mo-
and for filling up the gaps,
' meanwhile by negotiating for reci
' procity in competing products? Prob
-1 ably not so many as one out of ten
bothered their heads about the mat
' ter.
A still smaller proportion—practi
* cally none, excepting the half-baked
1 free traders on the committee which
' reported the resolution —had the faint
est conception of what would be in
' volved in tariff revision downward,
coupled with still further tariff con
cessions in reciprocity treaties.
We think the anti-protective news
' papers are mistaken in supposing that
American manufacturers are ready to
toss protection overboard. The mis
r take is a natural one, to be sure, in
view of that absurd tariff revision
• resolution, but it is a mistake, never
-3 tlieless.
Cost Reduced by Protection.
The tariff on plate glass has at
least not prevented the reduction in
' price of that article from $2.50 per
3 square foot in 1876 to 30 and 35 cents
! per square foot at the present time.
r But the tariff on plate glass has per
-3 milted the development of a very val
' uable American industry, and the ex
" istence of this industry lias had more
> to do with lowering the.cost of all
1 plate glass to American consumers
1 than any other factor in connection
with that reduction. Principally ow
ing to the difference in wages paid,
the cost of producing* plate glass in
this country is very much greater
than in France or Germany, or else
where in Europe. These facts are re
spectfully referred to those persons
in the Fifth congressional district of
this state who for local reasons are
asking for a revision of the tariff in
behalf of plate glass. The protective
tariff has been a good friend to the
1 American consumer of plate glass.—
Houghton Gazette,
!GIVEN A JAIL SENTENCE. 1
MAN REFUSED TO CALL A DOC
TOR FOK HIS DAUGHTER,
WHO WAS SICK.
New York Court Says a Father's Ex- ;
cuse that He Had No Faith in
Physicians Is Not Valid.
New York.—Clarence W. Byrne, '
who was recently tried and j
convicted on charges growing out of j
his failure to employ medical assist- :
ance for his 6-year-old daughter, who j
died of pneumonia, was on Friday |
sentenced to 30 days' imprisonment
by the court of general sessions, j
Byrne, who is a salesman, was arrest- j
ed on a charge of violating a section j
of the penal code which provides that i
"a person who wilfully omits, without ;
lawful excuse, to perform a duty by i
law imposed upon him to furnish
I food, clothing, shelter or medical at- [
j tendance to a minor, is guilty of a
misdemeanor." The complainant
i was Coroner Acritelli. The decision j
was given by Justice Kean and the
wnole court was unanimous for con
viction and sentence.
The defendant's excuse for not
calling a medical practitioner during j
] his daughter's illness was "want of
! faith in doctors" and reliance upon
! the efficacy of the religious faith to
| which he belongs. The cyurt held
I the sole question before it to be
i whether the omission to furnish mecli
i cal attendance under the circum
| gtancee constituted a "lawful excuse."
; THREE Ki'irO AT A CROSSING.
I A Car on an Electric Railway Near
Jackson, Mich., Strikes an
Automobile.
Jackson, Mich. A westbound
i car on the Detroit., Jackson &
| Chicag > electric railroad struck an
| ant mobile containing five Jackson
j residents at Sutton's Crossing, about
thrae miles oast of here, last evening,
j Mrs. Levi Palmer, Mrs. Emily Pulliver
and Bernice Oliver were killed, the
' two last named instantly. Adelbert
i Oliver, a prominent business man of
| this city, who was driving the car.
I was probably fatally injured, while
Mrs. It. A. OlivTv, the fifth passenger,
es aped with less serious injuries. Mr.
and Mrs. Oliver and Mrs. Palmer
! were taken aboard the electric car
| and brought to this city, but Mrs.
j Palmer died before they reached the
i hospital.
!svo parallel electric railroad
| tracks, the unused Qoland line and
| the Detroit, Jackson & Chicago, cross
i the country road at the paint where
j the accident occurred. A house and
; . me trees hid th" approaching car.
| From the fact that the brakes on the
touring car were not set, it is be
li-'ved Mr. Oliver, who was driving,
did not see the car. Rorniee Oliver,
one of the killed was Mr. Oliver's
I daughter. Mrs. Pulliver was Mrs.
| Oliver's mother and Mrs. Palmer was
their guest.
BUSINESS BULLETIN.
Improvement in Crop Prospects
Brinrjs Out Libert.l Orders for
Fall Trade.
New York.—R. G. Dun ii Co.'s
' Weekly Review of Trade says:
Trade reports from, the leading
! cities are singularly uniform in mak
; Ing favorable comparisons with the
! corresponding week in any previous
j year. At most western ;ind southern
| points the improvement in crop pros
' pects has brought out liberal fall or
| ders, and there is evidently more
| confidence in the future than at any
| time since it was found thai, many of
\ the principal farm products had made
I a bad start. Jobbing houses are pre
| paring for winter trade ou a scale
seld un equalled, the consumption cf
seasonable goods promising to de
plete stocks most satisfactorily.
I Manufacturers still receive orders
in abundance, few clothing cancella
! tions appear and it is the exception
| when plants have smaller contracts
j than a year ago. More detailed re
! ports for the first half of 1007 add to
| the earlier testimony that all records
; for six months were far surpassed.
CAME WITH MURDEROUS INTENT.
! Mew York "Chinks" invada Boston's
Chinatown and Kill Three Men
and Wound Seven Others.
Boston, Mass. —Burning with h;u
| tred for their deadly enemies be
' longing to the rival On Leong Tong
; society, a band of New York China-
I men numbering a dozen or more, and
j said to l>e members of the notorious
I Hep Sing Tong organization, entered
i a narrow alley in Chinatown last
night and, drawing revolvers, opened
fire upon half a hundred Chinamen,
killing three and injuring seven. At
the first volley the Chinamen rushed
for their quarters.
The Hep Sing Tong men chased
their victims Into their own doorways
and shot tiiem down as they rushed
upstairs or into side rooms. Then,
casting away their guns, the visitors
ran from the Chinese quarter, most
of them escaping the; .police.
The shooting occurred In the cen
ter of Chinatown, whera about 50 chil
dren were at play. Fully 50 shots
were exchanged.
Railroad's License Is Revoked.
Montgomery, Ala. —The Southern
railway's license to do busi
ness in Alabama was revoked Friday
by Secretary of State Julian because
the railroad company violated a re
cently enacted law in transferring
damage cases from state to federal
courts.
Vardamsn Gains with Later Returns.
Memphis, Tenn.—Returns show a
considerable reduction in the major
ity for Congressman Williams over
Gov. Vardaman in the contest for the
Mississippi senatorial nomination.
ALMOST A CENTURY PLANT.
I iIX
I suppose you're very old, aren't
■ yon, Mr. Hobbs.
Why Gar bless Ve, Master Tom, if
! the cankl winter winds don't nip I in
the bud I shall be an octogeranura
: next spring!
Got Service.
The boarder who was a month be
hind with the landlady was surprised
■ at the size of the heap of mashed po
! tatoes the girl had brought him.
He was even more surprised when
he found a folded paper in the centetr
1 of the heap.
But iio didn't open it. He knew
: what it was.
Carefully wiping it with his napkin,
he put it in his vest poeket and went
; ahead calmly with his dinner.
Van can't disconcert an expej lenced
| boarder.—Chicago Tribune.
Poily's Preference.
The lady w■< ■, admiring a parrot in
S Hio bird store.
"Pretty Polly," she said. "Does
Polly want a cracker?"
"No, thank you," answered the par
| rot, who happened to be a Boston
graduate, "but I'd like a plate of
beans, please."—Chicago Daily News.
Encroaching.
Magazine Editor—Seems to me our
verse contributors are getting mighty
| particular.
Assistant —They are.
Magazine Editor—Yes; here's one
who insists on having his poem run
; next to pure advertising matter.—
1 Puck.
Guile.
"Henry." she said disconsolatetly,
I "you didn't give me a birthday gift."
"By Jove, that's so," said Henry.
I 'But, you see, ! can't realise that you
! ever have birthday anniversaries."
Then she was happy, and he smiled
the mean, subtle smile of a man who
has saved money.—Royal Magazine.
Intense Compliment.
"How did that successful actress
come to marry her press agent?"
"Jle must have succeeded in con
vincing her that he meant every word
| of what he was writing for publica
j lion. —Washington Star.
I ~
Just in One Direction.
"He is one of the best men going."
"He never struck me as a particu-
I larly fine man. In what way is he
l among the best, men?"
"He is in such demand at wed
| dings."—Baltimore American.
The Resscn Why.
i Amateur Yachtsman—How does it
j happen that you have always lived
| near ilie water, yet do not know how
J to swim?
Fisherman's Boy—Don't have to
| swim. 1 know how to sail. —Royal
Magazine.
Underestimated His Powers.
"Yes. I was out in all that storm.
My raincoat was soaKed, and "
"But you can't soak a raincoat, you
know."
"I can't, hey? Here's the check
for it." —Chicago Tribune.
No Secret.
'Do tell me, Mrs. Manntuge. how
you succeed in keeping your liiied
help so long."
"By letting them merely help. I
really do the work, you know."—
Chicago Tribune.
Easy.
The New Office Boy—But what do
yer do w'en yer ain't got no more
gran-mudders to die?
The Old Office Boy—Git granddad
to marry again.—Cleveland Leader.
■
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|| popular
1 » "
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' i ■ i i- ri ... 1,,.., i.. y,.
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i DR. 8. D. BLA&3S fk
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12 had he en a BiifTerer for a number of yearn
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h£ ami legfi, and triod all the romedltu that 1 could % |
gather from medical works, and aleo consulted {SJ.
JjK with a number of the be3t|>b v eiclanß. but round &.{
fjCSj nothing that gave the relief obtained from g*
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R "B-DROPS" can be used any length of £ i
P time without acquiring a "drua habit," h.
tie as It Is entirely free of opium, cocaine. K" !
K alcohol, laudauum, and cthsr similar g I
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fi Larecsue nott!c. "£S.m?ov>s"fP<iOßo»e»> £*
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n BWANBOSB mumm cuss CGMPABY, h
*js Dept. 80. 160 L&i*e Street, Chicago. ?
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