Cameron County press. (Emporium, Cameron County, Pa.) 1866-1922, January 09, 1908, Page 2, Image 2

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    2
CAMERON COUNTY PRESS.
H. H. MULLIN, Editor.
Published Every Thursday.
TERMS OF SUBSCRIPTION,
per year
II paid in advance 1 "0
ADVERTISING RATES:
Advertisements are published at the rate of dol.ar
dol.ar per square for one Insertion and fifty
ftttiin i.er square for each subsequentlosertiou
Hates by the your, or for six or three months,
*re low and uniform, and will be furnished on
application.
Legul and Official Advertising per square
threo times or less. -.' J. each subsequent inser
tion . l 0 cents per • quare
Local notioea 10 cents per line for oneinser
sertlon: 5 cents per line lor each subs quent
consecutive insertion.
Obituary notices over five lines. 10 cents per
line. Simple announcements of births, mar
riages and deaths will foe inserted free.
Business cards, five lines or less. i 5 per year;
over Ave 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 Purss is complete
and affords facilities for dt>ing tin- best class of
W.. rk. P A H'LLCL' I. Alt ATThN I ION PAIDTO LAW
Pkintini..
No paper will he discontinued until arrear
ages are paid, except at the option of the pub
lisher.
Papers sent out of the county must foe paid
tor in advance.
Prosperity and West Point.
The present shortage of 70 or more
in the authorized strength of the
cadet corps at West Point is not ex
plained by the superintendent as due
entirely to the severity of the entrance
examinations. There has been in re
cent years an increasing number of
appointees who have failed to report
at the academy for their examinations,
in this year's new class the number
reaching 79. The average boy's burn
ing desire to bo a soldier, particularly
an officer, appears to have been cor
rupted by the "commercialism" of our
times, according to the army view, for
the superintendent of West Point re
marks: "It is believed that the more
lucrative pursuits and greater fields
for promotion of private life are di
verting young men from these careers
of small pay and slow promotion in
our country's service." Thus pros
perity has hit both ends of the army
—the academy and the recruiting of
fice.
It is the opinion of Dr. Hirsch that
children are entitled to fairy tales.
They are one of the pleasures of youth
which stern old people trying to raise
them by rules should not take from
them. The old people shouldn't be so
particular anyway. They like fairy
tales themselves. The young woman
who, tiring of her job of scrubbing the
hack stairs, turns shoplifter and then
tells a tale of a millionaire papa, will
keep the grown-ups open-mouthed and
calling for more, until some one tele
graphs the sad news to pa and finds
that he doesn't exist or that if lie does
he is paying teller in a livery stable
and has lost interest in his charming
daughter since she ran away witii the
actor man. Can you blame the little
children for crying for marvels? Pa
waxes fat on them, taking them all
in and saying, "What a pity that one
so fair and well raised should have
come to this!"
Liberia has lately lost nominal con
trol of part of the territory over which
the congress of the black republic was
supposed to exercise sovereignty. A
new treaty with Prance has been ne
gotiated, delimiting the boundaries of
the republic's country to the advan
tage of France. The French insist
that in view of the ignorance of the
natives in the interior of the existence
«>f any independent government on the
coast, it is not encroachment on an in
dependent power for the French to
push their boundaries seaward. As
Liberia is an independent power, the
protection of its territory is a matter
lor its government, and not for out
siders. American friends of the coun
try may regret that the experiment of
setting up a negro republic has not
been more successful, but they must
face the facts.
The present first class of midship
men at the Naval academy, who have
pledged themselves voluntarily against
a revival of hazing in any way, are to
be commended for their perception of
what is meant by their future as offi
cers and gentlemen of the United
States navy. It is to be hoped that in
time a higher standard will obtain in
all our colleges by which this element
of brutality and bullying will be made
a relic of the past.
Do not as a brilliant workman ima
gine that you are the proprietor of the
establishment, for just when you feel
that you are indispensable, then per
haps the boss may ask your resigna
tion and break the day dream of your
lofty importance.
Short-sighted citizens who in times
of untroubled prosperity are habitual
purchasers of gold bricks are the first
in times of stringency to hide their
savings in their socks and cripple the
nation's industries.
The Japs say all they want is equal
privileges with citizens of the United
States. That's something citizens of
the United States can't always get
themselves.
Part of (he gold we brought over
from Europe with so much trouble will
hurry back aagin with aliens who, hav
ing made their piles, are going home
tt> live in comfort.
TWO KEN KILLED; 13 INJURED.
AN EXPLOSION IN A STEEL
PLANT AT BRADDOCK, PA.
Molten Metal Sifted Through the Lin
ing of a Converter, Throwing 15
Tons of Metal Into a Pit
Where Men Worked.
Pittsburg, Pa. Two men were
killed and 13 others were seriously
Injured by an explosion Wednesday in
Converter No. of the Edgar Thom
son plant of the I'nited States Steel
Co. at North Braddock, about seven
miles east of here. The dead:
Paul Kurisck, aged 30 years. Brad
dock.
Stephen Doviah, aged 35, Braddock.
Six of the injured were Americans
and the others Slavs. All were re
moved to a hospital In this city,
where it was said their injuries were
not serious.
No official statement of the cause of
the explosion has been issued, but old
converter mill men say the cause
could hardly be other than that some
of the molten metal sifted through
the soapstone lining of the converter
and came in contact with the steel
sheathing, which perhaps was damp.
When the explosion occurred the
bottom of the converter dropped out,
throwing 15 tons of molten metal into
the pit where 15 men were working
at the ladles. There was no explo
sion when the hot mass of steel
struck the bottom of the pit. but in
stead flames of burning gas were sent
up, which burned the men in the pit.
The two men who were killed had
been working under the converter and
their bodies were terribly mangled.
The force of the explosion blew the
sheet iron roof off of the converting
mill and caused two of the walls to
collapse, besides breaking all of the
windows in buildings in the vicinity,
and partially destroying the engine
house and warehouse near the con
verting mill.
SOME ADVICE TO LEGISLATORS.
It Is Given by Gov. Hughes, of New
York, in His Annual Message.
Albany, N. Y. —The annual mes
sage of Gov. Hughes, which was
sent to the legislature Wednesday,
contains many important recommen
dations. Chief among these is a rec
ommendation regarding the amend
ment of the law relating to banks and
trust companies. The governor urges
the legislature to adopt every practic
able means "to prevent a repetition
of reprehensible practices and to as
sure the proper management of the
financial institutions chartered and
supervised by the state, upon whose
stability the interests of our people
largely depend."
Another important recommenda
tion lias as its object the complete
suppression of race track gambling
throughout tf.e state.
Direct nominations at primaries and
a simplified form of ballot are urged
in the message, and recommendations;
also are made for better provision for
the care and protection of emigrants;
for the extension of the state's forest
preserves; for careful revision of the
forest, fish and game law; for the en
actment of a license law, providing
reasonable license fees for hunting;
for amendment of the constitution of
Greater New York to exclude from
the city's debt limit all bonds issued
for purposes which produce revenues
in excess of their maintenance
charges; and for the establishment of
a secondary agricultural school, which
would provide a suitable complement
to the work of the college at Ithaca.
POLICE ARE BAFFLED.
Murder Mystery of the "Woman in
Red" at Harrison, N. J., Is
Unsolved.
New York City—The mystery en
veloping the murder of the "woman
in red" is seemingly as impenetrable
to-day as when the nude body was
first discovered on Christmas day par
tially concealed in the water and
slime of a lonely pond near Harrison,
N. J. Thus far the detectives have
failed to find a single reliable clue to
the identity of the woman or her
slayer.
The identifications of the dead wo
man by Mrs. Hattie Hull and Detec
tive Drabell, of Orange, N. J., have
completely collapsed and left the case
more puzzling than ever. Word was
received Wednesday from Philadel
phia that Agnes O'Keefe, whom De
tective Drabell believed the murdered
woman to be. had been found in that
city. .Mrs. Hull's identification is not
credited by the police.
Acting Mayor Daly, of Harrison, N.
J., announced Wednesday that the
city council would offer a reward of
SI,OOO for the arrest and conviction
of the slayer of the woman.
An American Consul Is Attacked.
Guatemala City, Guatemala. —The
American charge d'affaires, Will
iam F. Sands, has returned here from
Ocos, whither he went to investigate
an alleged attack on the American
consul there by the Mexican consul.
It is said the American consul fears a
further attack and declares that the
Guatemalan authorities have refused
to protect him, alleging that Guate
mala fears Mexico may misconstrue
any step taken against Mexican citi
zens. The Mexican minister to Gau
temaia claims that if the United
States makes demands on Guatemala
they will serve as an excuse for a
serious attack on Mexicans residing
at Ocos.
Coke Workers' Wages are Cut.
Uniontown, Pa. Announcement
is made by the H. C. Frick Coke
Co. of a decrease in wages affecting
all of its coke plants in this region.
The decrease is about 7 '/a per cent,
and places the wages slightly above
what they were prior to the increase
made in March, 1906.
Brewers are Refused an Injunction.
Atlanta, Ga. Judge Newman,
on Wednesday, refused to grant
a temporary injunction requested by
the brewery interests to stop the en
forcement of the prohibition law of
GCC
CAMERON COUNTY PRESS, THURSDAY, JANUARY 9, 1903.
TAFT PROGRAM
IS ADOPTED
OHIO REPUBLICAN CONVENTION
TO BE HELD MARCH 3 AND 4.
PRIMARIES ON FEBRUARY 11.
Voters Will be Given a Chance to Ex
press Their Choice for a Presi
dential Candidate at Primary—
Central Committee Meets.
Columbus, O. The republicans
of Ohio will be given an oppor
tunity to express by direct vote their
choice for the party's candidate for
president at primaries to be held on
February 11, when delegate:; and al
ternates to the republican state con
vention will be elected. The conven
tion will be held in Columbus on
March 3 and 4, and will select in ad
dition to four delegates at large to
the republican national convention,
candidates for governor and other
state officers.
The call for the primaries and con
vention were adopted last evening by
the republican state central commit
tee after a protracted and lively ses
sion. The friends ot William Jl. Taft,
eecvetary of war, and candidate for
the republican nomination for presi
dent, were in control of the commit
tee, cast'nK. 1 ' sotes to 7 for the sup
porters of Senator Foraker, also an
avowed candidate for the presidency.
The vote stood 14 to 7 on every
proposition which required a roll cull
except the selection of a temporary
chairman for the state convention.
James R. Garfield, secretary of the In
terior, the choice of the Taft support
ers, receiving 13 votes to 8 cast for
Harry M. Daugherty, of Columbus.
Richard McCloud, of London, a close
personal friend of Mr. Daugherty, but
a Taft supporter, voted for him as
against .Mr. Garfield.
The officers chosen for the state
convention are:
Chairman, James R. Garfield, Cleve
land; secretary, R. M. Switzer, Gal
-1 ipolls; assistant secretary, Malcolm
Bennings, Athens; sergeant-at-arms,
Richard Gilson, Steubenville.
The state committee decided that it
had nothing to do with the selection
of national delegates in the congres
sional districts and declined to make
any suggestion in regard thereto.
The committee met early in the af
ternoon to draft a call for the pri
maries anil convention. This com
mittee called upon Gov. Harris during
the recess to consult his wishes in re
gard to the call. A committee repre
senting tlie Foraker supporters also
called on the governor and asked him
to permit his name to be presented
for chairman of the state committee,
but the governor declined.
The call reported by the sub-com
mittee and adopted by the general
committee by a vote of 14 to 7 is one
of the most elaborate issued by a
state committee.
Several amendments to the call
were proposed by the friends of Sen
ator Foraker, but in each case they
were voted down. The chief fight
was made against the direct primary
plan for the selection of delegates to
the state convention. Tly: Foraker
men proposed that delegates to coun
ty conventions be chosen by direct
vote, the county conventions to
choose the delegates to the state con
vention.
The call as adopted provides for a
total of 815 delegates to the state con
vention. The Australian ballot is to
be used in the primary. If petition is
made the names of candidates for
delegates may be printed under the
name of the person who may be their
choice for presidential candidate.
The unit rule in the election of dele
gates will be observed in all except
Cuyahoga and Hamilton counties,
which may be divided into districts.
Provision is made for challengers at
the polls, which will be open from 1
to 7 p. m., February 11.
LONG MISSING HEIR RETURNS.
Man Who Left Home 17 Years Ago
Comes Back to Get $12,000.
Lancaster, Pa. Although offici
ally declared dead years ago and
for years believed by his wife and
friends here to have died, George M.
Gable appeared in the local court
Thursday to claim $12,000 from the
estate of his uncle, Jacob Gable. Sev
enteen years ago Gable disappeared,
leaving his wife and several small
children. All efforts to trace him
failed and his wife believing him
dead, remarried.
When Jacob Gable died in 1904
Gable, one of the heirs, was declared
dead by the court. The executors,
however, refused to pay over the in
heritance to his widow and instituted
a search which resulted in the long
missing man being found in Sacra
mento, Cal. Gable came east and
was identified in court by the wife he
left 17 years ago as the rightful
heir. The woman's second husband
has begun proceedings for a divorce.
A Decrease in Gold Production.
Washington. D. C. The produc
tion of gold in the United States fell
off $4,753,401 in 1907 as against 1906,
whereas the amount of silver produc
ed was increased by over 1,000,000
ounces. Alaska's gold production
fell off a little more than $3,000,000,
according to the preliminary report
of the director of the mint.
Receivers Appointed for Big Railroad.
Richmond, Va. The Seaboard
Air Line railroad system was put
into the hands of receivers here
Thursday through the action of Judge
Pritchard, of the United States cir
cuit court, who appointed as receiv
ers Lancaster Williams, or Richmond,
and Uavis Warfield, of Baltimore.
A Gain in Shipbuilding.
Washington, I!. C. During the
calendar year 1907 the bureau of
navigation reports 1,056 vessels of
520,508 gross tons built in the United
States, compared with 1,045 vessels
pf 393,291 tons in 1906.
FORAKER SAYS CALL IS ILLEGAL
HE ATTACKS METHOD FOR
STATE PRIMARY ELECTION.
He Claims that It Conflicts with the
Law and Is Unfair in
Many Ways.
Cincinnati, O. —A flat refusal to
be bound by the conditions of the call
made Thursday night at Columbus for
the republican state convention which
is to name a state ticket and select
delegates at large to the national con
vention is the conclusion reached by
United States Senator Foraker and
announced in a statement given to the
I>ress Friday night.
Primaries for selection of delegates
to the convention were provided for
in the official oall issued by the ex
ecutive committee by a vote of 14 to
7.. The method provided is sharply
criticized by Senator Foraker. The
statement in part follows:
"1 am not sure that I understand
the call, although I have read it sev
eral times. If I do, it is another case
of asking for bread and getting a
stone. My Idea in requiring primaries
was to have the election of delegates
brought home to the people, so that
in each ward, for instance, we could
select our immediate representatives.
This call makes all that impossible.
"In addition it prescribes require
ments not authorized by the statute
and not within the power of the state
central committee. Some of the re
quirement!! are in direct conflict with
the statute. Some of them are very
burdensome. One, in particular, is
the rciiuistMuent that. b- fore there can
be a Taft ticket and a Foraker ticket
there must be a petition signed by 20
times the number of candidates for
delegates and alternates. That would
mean in this county about 4,000 sign
ers or petitioners.
"The unreasonableness of the re
quirement that there shall be 4.000 pe
titioners to authorize a ticket is
shown not only by the fact that the
law makes no such requirement, but
that in cases where the law authoriz
ed county and city officers to be nomi
nated by petition, only 300 names are
necessary to nominate any county of
ficer and only f>o names are necessary
to nominate any municipal officer.
"If, in the contemplation of the law,
50 signers are enough to authorize
placing a man's name on the ticket
for mayor of Cincinnati or Cleveland,
certainly it is beyond anything con
templated by the law that 4,000 signa
tures should be necessary to nominate
a lot of delegates and alternates
merely to attend the state conven
tion."
WAS A MOTORMAN'S WIFE.
Identity of Woman Murdered on the
Hackensack Meadows Establiched.
Newark, N. J. After a half
dozen supposed identifications had
been disproved the police were satis
lied Friday nisfht that the woman
murdered on the flats that border the
Passiac river in Harrison was Helena
Whitmore, who. with her husband,
Theodore S. Whitmore, conducted a
furnished room house at 235 Adams
street. Brooklyn. The identification
was made by the woman's sister, Mrs.
Susan Schmitter, of the Bronx, and
corroborated by Mrs. Sehmitter's hus
band, Frank Englert, a friend, and
finally by the murdered woman's hus
band.
Whitmore lias been detained by the
police and a summons was issued for
Fnglert. The latter, who admitted an
intimate acquaintance with Mrs. Whit
more, was able togo into so minute
detail in his identification that the au
thorities believe he will prove a valu
able witness.
Whitmore told the police of his
struggle to live down an unpleasant
past and how a faithless wife had
held over his head a threat of expos
ure—to make known to new acquain
tances here what he now admitted,
that he was serving a sentence in
Dannemora prison for assaulting a
man when pardoned by Gov. Black.
Bitter quarrels and as many reconcili
ations marked their married lif<*'of 15
years. His wife, he said, had become
infatuated with a sailor.
Whitmore is a Brooklyn elevated
motorman, who ordinarily works
nights. He did not goto work Christ
mas night.
BUSINESS BULLETIN.
Curtailment of Production Is General
in the Iron and Steel Industry
and Cotton Mills.
New York City.—R. G. Dun & Co.'s
Weekly Review of Trade says:
Business quieted down at the con
clusion of holiday sales, as is custom
ary, and time was devoted to stock
taking, while manufacturing plants
were overhauled ai\d repaired. Much
idle machinery resumed on January 2
and more mills will reopen next week,
but in many leading industries there
will continue to be a reduction in out
put until the outlook is more definite.
This curtailment is general in the
iron and steel industry and at New
England cotton mills.
Clothing manufacturers have re
ceived numerous cancellations, and in
some lines buyers have asked delay
in shipments of spring goods until
the situation is more fully developed.
There is a better feeling as to mer
cantile collections.
Many iron furnaces and steel mills
have resumed and others are to open
next week, but the curtailment of pro
duction has been so general that not
over 50 per cent, of the capacity will
then be in operation.
Harden Loses; Von Moltke Wins.
Berlin. The notorious Harden-
Von Moltke libel suit came to an
end last evening when Harden, the ac
cused editor of Die Zukunft, was sen
tenced to four months' imprisonment
and to pay the entire costs of both
the present and former trial.
Death of a Noted Priest.
Washington, D. C. Rev. D. J.
Stafford, pastor of St. Patrick's Ro
man Catholic church in this city, one
of the most noted divines in the conn
try, died Friday at Providence hos
pital, following an operation last
Tuesday. He was 47 years old. J
OTHERS TO BE St'NT FOR.
Shortly after two o'clock one bitter
winter morning a physician drove four
miles in answer to a telephone call.
On his arrival the man who had sum
moned him said:
"Doctor, I ain't in any particular
pain, but somehow or other I've got a
feeling that death is nigh."
The doctor felt the man's pulse and
listened to his heart. "Have you
made your will?" he asked, finally.
The man turned pale. "Why, no,
docetor. At my age—oh, doc, it ain't
true, is it? It can't be true —"
"Who's your lawyer?"
"Higginbotliam; but —"
"Then you'd better send for him at
once."
The patient, white and trembling,
went to the telephone.
"Who's your pastor?" continued the
doctor.
"Rev. Kellogg M. Brown," mumbled
the patient. "But, doctor, do you
think—"
"Send for him immediately. Your
father, too, should be summoned; also
your—"
"Say, doctor, do you really think
I'm going to die?" The man began to
blubber softly.
The doctor looked at him hard. "No,
I don't," he replied. "There's nothing
at all the matter with you. Rut I hate
to be the only man you've made a fool
of on a bitter cold morning like this."
Why He Didn't Riso.
It was married men's night at the
revival meeting. "Let. you husbands
who have troubles oa your minds
stand up!" shouted the emotionaJ
preacher at the height of his spasm.
Instantly every man in Uio church
rose to his feet except one.
"Aha!" exclaimed the preacher,
peering out at this lone sitter, who oc
cupied a chair near the door and apart
from the others. "You are the one in
a million."
"It ain't that," piped back this one
helplessly as the rest of the congre
gation turned to gaze suspiciously at
him. "I can't get up—l'm paralyzed!"
—Judge.
Have You Noticed It?
Bacon —I see it said that the light
of the glow-worm and firefly is entire
ly unaccompanied by heat.
Egbert—That seems strange when
you consider that a wasp is accom
panied by no light, and yet when it
sits down you may have had occasion
to notice that the operation is accom
panied by considerable heat.—
Yonkers Statesman.
In the Rush Lunchroom.
"Did yeou hear that, Silas?" queried
Mrs. Ityetop, as she ate her pumpkin
pie with the sugar tongs. "The man
at this table called for floats and the
other man called for sinkers."
"Floats and sinkers," echoed Mr.
Rvetop, in surprise. "By gosh, I
reckon next, they will call for fishing
lines."—Chicago Daily News.
THEY WERE BOTH SURPRISED.
Clergyman—l am surprised to see
you here. Smith.
Convict No. 100 —So was I, or I'd
never a bin 'ere.
Made Him Laugh.
Church —I see the public utilities
commission have ordered the trolley
people to put on more cars.
Gotham (with a chuckle) —So I see.
"But what are you laughing at?"
"I furnish the straps."—Yonkera
Statesman.
Tabloid Romance.
I.
The count courted her.
11.
Society courted the bridal pair.
111.
She "courted" the count. Decree
granted.—Chicago Journal.
G.SCHMIDT'S,^
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