ESTABLISHED, I*6B. Cameron County Press HENRY H. MULLIN, Editor and Publisher. PUBLISHED KVKKY THURSDAY Entered at the Postoffice at Emporium as second class matter. The Best Advertising Medium in Northern Pennsylvania. RATES OF ADVERTISING. Ordinary Advertisements are calculate! by the inch in length of column. Ordinary advertisements, to take the run of the paper and change four times a year, will be inserted at the rates stated in the following table: | 1 in. | 2 in. | 8 in. | 5 in. |lO in.,20 in. 1 Week. II 00 ?2001 800 350 800 12 00 2 Weeks. 1 ISO' 300 400 500 11 00 16 00 3 Weeks. 200 350 500 700 13 00 18 00 1 Weeks. 250 ! 400 600 800 15 00 20 00 2 Months. 100 000 8 00' 12 00 20 00 28 00 3 Months. 500 800 12 00 15 00 25 00 '.55 00 0 Months. 800 12 00 18 00| 22 00 35 00 60 00 1 Year. . 12 0o! 18 CO 25 00; 30 00 60 00 100 00 Table or tigure work will be charged double ratoe. Legal advertisements per line ten cents each week, nonpareil type. ANNOUNCEMENTS of names of Candidates for office, IS.OO each. Announcement of candi dates for borough or township oflices, SI.OO each. Announcements of candidates lor delegates to the state Convention $5.00 each; delegates, alter nates or conferees to a local convention or con ference, SI.OO each. POLITICAL NOTICES, 20 cents per line each insertiou. Nothing inserted for less than SI.OO. LOCAL NOTICES In the local columns will be iuserted for ten cents per line the first week and live cents per line for each subsequent consecu tive week without change. ANNOUNCEMENTS of births, marriages and deaths will be inserted free, but all obituary notices and resolutions will be charged five cents a line and obituary verses five cents a line. Business Cards, five lines or less iJo.Oßperyear All exceeding five lines, SI.OO per line. CARDS OF THANKS, positively SI.OO for ten lines, or less; over ten lines, ten cents for each additional line. NOTICE TO SUBSCRIBERS. The date on the address label of each subscri ber's paper shows the time to which the sub scription is paid; and all subscribers in arrears are requested to pay up as soon as possible. On receipt of payments on subscription at this office, a receipt will be promptly returned, and the date on the address label will be corrected first of month. lu all communications relating to subscrip tion our correspondents are requested to state the Postofiice to which the paper is now sent, or is to be sent, and to be careful to write all proper names plainly. In directing a change of address, always give the old address, as weil as the new one to which you want the paper afterwards sent. JOB PRINTING. The Jobbing Department of the PRESS is com plete and aflords facilities for doing the best class of work. PARTICULAR ATTENTION PAID TO Law Printing. REPUBLICAN TICKET. For President, WILLIAM HOWARD TAFT, of Ohio. For Vice President, JAMES SCHOOLCRAFT SHERMAN, of New York. For Judge of Superior Court, W. D. PORTER, of Allegany County. For Congressman, CHARLES F. BARCLAY, of Sinnamahoning, Pa. For Assembly, JOSIAH HOWARD, of Emporium. For Associate Judge, JOHN A. WYKOFF, of Grove. For Sheriff, FRANK G. JL'DD, of Emporium. For County Commissioners, S. P. KREIDER, of Driftwood. J. W. LEWIS, ofSbippen. For County Auditors, T. E. FULTON, of Grove. GEO. A. WALKER, JR., of Emporium. BUCK GIVES OUT. Plenty of Emporium Readers Have This Experience. You tax the kidneys—overwork them— J'hcv tan t keep up the continunl strain. Jhe li n k _ives out- -it aches and pains; Urinary troubles a'l in. Don t wait longer—take Doan's Kid ney Pills. Mrs. A. J. An.].: -on. X. Main St.. Pott Allegany. Pa.. s:n.-: have used a great many remedies for the relief of kidney trouble but have never found anything to giv\ -itch beneficial effect as Doan's Kidney Pills. 1 suffered con stantly with backache and pains In the morning it was with the greatest difficulty that I arose an 1 il 1 attempted to stoop or lift anything, shaip thrusts of pain were the result. Headaches and a tired feeling were also present and it was with difficulty that my ordinary duties were perforcm. Doan's Kidney Pills, gave mo relief at once and at the present time lam much in every way. For the reults recieved, I am glad to give my grateful recommendation of Doan's Kidney Pills." For sale by all dealers. Price 50 cents. Foster Milburn Co., Buffalo, New York, sole agents for the United States. Ke aiembor the name—Doan's—and take no othe;. What is Best for Indigestion? A. Robinson, of Drutnrjuin, Ontario, has been troubled for years with indiges tion and recommends Chamberlain's Stom ach find Liver Tablets as "the best medi cine 1 ever used.' If troubled with in digestion or constipation give them a trial. They are certain to prove bene ficial. They are easy to take and pleas ant in effect. Price, 25 cents. Samples free at L. Taugart's drugstore. Bryanism, Gomperism, Anarch ism—Then Ceasarism. It is still true that history is apt to I repeat itself. Mirabeau, Danton, Marat, Robspierre, about a century ago, assumed to be the fathers of the ! poorer and laboring classes in Prance. They exaggerated their condition, and j preached the doctrine of hate against i the government, and those in power i and authority. A revolution was 1 speedily brought on, the ruling power dethroned, riot, violence and blood shed ran riot; and for a time anarchy dominated society and the country. | Liberty was a mere anarchical license to excuse and justify the most shock ing and bloody crimes committed in her name. I In a short time the horrors of the French Revolution caused its leaders to shrink from its consequences, and the pendulum of public sentiment swung back again, and Bonapartism or Caescerism, assumed power, the autocratic and tyrannical rule of one man power prevailed and convulsed the civilized world. The seeds of Socialism and Anarch ism have been pretty extensively sown in this land of ours. Bryanism and Gomperism are closely identified there with Their expression of friendship for the poorer and laboring classes is simply professional, and is prompted by selfish motives with a view of using them to gratify their personal ambit ions in the acquisition of political pow er They are, as did Marat, Danton and Mirabeau, preaching the doctrine of hatred against the government and the wealthy and well-to-do in the country. They falsely charge that the government is in league with the wealthy men and wealthy corporations of the country. The history of the legislation enact ed in the past ten years and the en forcement thereof in the courts of the land, shows conclusively that their allegations are false. Large corpora tions and trubts have been compelled to yield to the law atul have been punished for its violations. But Bryanism and Gomperism have struck bands in assailing the power of the courts, and desire to have their powers limited and curtailed so far as their being legitimately used in cases of labor disputes. They have not as yet shown where any serious wrong or injustice was done by the exercise of the power of injunction in labor or other cases. To say that when a body of men excited and highly wrought j upon by such men as Gonipers resort I to the destruction of life and property i —to right what they may, in their own j judgment, regard as a wrong—cannot I be restrained without giving notice of I five days, is to destroy the power of j the courts to prevent the commission j of irreparable in jury and wrong, be- J cause the in jury to life and property | would be committed before an in junc -1 tion could issue. It would be locking j the stable after the horse is stolen. | Then why commit the country to class 1 legislation of this kind? The power of ! injunction carries no dread to any per ! son or body of persons who do not | wish to violate the restraints of law, and who do not desire to accomplish their purposes by violence and might. This attack by Gomperism and ! Bryanism is a step toward Anarch v. Strip the c arts of the power to issti" injunctions to prevent the commission of irreparable wrong and injury and , you invite might and violence to or.- ; force the righting of wrongs, real or i imaginary, which is Anarchy. The | Nation would then soon be on the j threshold of violent revolution and bloodshed, and Bryanism and Goinper | ism would bo willing to head it; and, i once installed in power, would use l that power with tyrannical effect. Because the Republican convention j declined to endorse Gomperism as to j assailing the courts, Mr. Gonipers ■ issues his ukase to the American Fed ! eration of Labor to vote for Bryan, i He assumes that the] members of the J organization of which he is the presi dent, are mere mentals, and are not thinking American citizens; and that they will do this bidding as the serfs i of Russia are expected to do when the i Czar issues bis ukase. Mr. Gonipers, had he the power, j would compel the members to obey bis command although it would result ! in the positive injury of the men and I sovereigns who are members of his ; organization. He, in violation of the j laws of his organization, assumes to ! control it politically. When he disre gards the laws of his organization is it ' any wonder he wants to be relieved from the restraints of law, so that he could be a law unto himself, and dic tate the laws unto others. Mr. Bryan exhibited what use be would make of great power were he invested with it when he put his iron heel upon the neck of James F. Guffey at Denver and ignored the right of the people to elect their own delegates ! the National Convention. Thus be j trampled upon the right of the people in Pennsylvania to rule-all forsooth, because Mr. Guffey was not enthusi astically in favor of Mr. Bryan's nomi nation by the Democratic party. Thus we can see Bryanism, Gomper ism, Anarchism, then Caersarism. Let ' the thinking- people ponder and con ! sider well what is for their best inter ! ests and that of the country when they j exercise their sovereign power at the i ! allot box in November next Bellc onte Republican. CAMERON COUNTY PRESS, THURSDAY, AUGUST 20, 1908. An Acrobat's Dilemma. The acrobats of the music halls have *o end in view except to cause amuse- Uent. But suppose one should meet them in ordinary life? Mr. Berkeley, the proprietor of a London hotel, was in his office about <> o'clock one even ing when he heard a knock at the iloor, While a voice, which seemed to express pain, cried "Open!" Mr. Berkeley obeyed, but a cry of horror escaped him, and he almost fell back ward. He saw before him, rolling on the grouud, topsyturvy, a kind of hu man ball which was walking upon its hands, with the head twisted round, eyes protruding and neck contorted. "I did not wish to alarm my neigh bors," gasped this extraordinary be ing-it was a contortionist from a cir cus who had been practicing in his room— "but I cannot unhook my leg from behind my neck, and unless you can help me I am afraid it is all up with me." Mr. Berkeley disentangled the acro bat, who fell exhausted on a chair. He had descended twenty stairs upon his hands In this position. A Bedouin's Idea of a Locomotive. It is interesting to know that the railroad between Jaffa and Jerusalem was made possible by locomotives from Philadelphia. They were orig inally made, writes Professor n. W. Dunning in "Today In Palestine," for a road in Central America which un fortunately could not pay for them when they were ready for delivery. They happened to be just right for the Jaffa-Jerusalem line and were at once purchased and shipped. I happened to be in Jerusalem, he writes, the day the first locomotive ar rived there, Aug. 20, 1892. Not only Ihe people from the city, but many from the villages, came to see the new wonder. Among them was a Bedouin from beyond Jordan. He carried back the report to the tribe: "It is like a big iron woman. It gives one screech and then runs away." This ingenious description spread rapidly through the ancient laud of Moab. The Lion and the Child. The strange spectacle of a lion play ing with a child is reported to have been witnessed at Yrylieid. A Dutch farmer, accompanied by his wife and little boy, was out shooting game. Suddenly the attention of the parents was drawn to the child, who had tod dled a short distance away to gather wild flowers. <'rowing with delight, the little fellow was pulling the hair of a full grown lion, and the animal appeared to be enjoying the operation. Spellbound, the farmer and his wife stood gazing at the scene. The farmer, even if his gun had contained a shot, could not have fired because of the child. The lion skipped sportively round the boy until, startled by loud shouts from the parents, it walked quietly away, followed by a lioness, which up to then had lain concealed in the lonj; grass. A hunt was afterward organized, hut the lions had disappear ed into the thick bush.—East Itand Express. She Hated Garrick. Mis. Olive was eminent as an actress on tl*" I.' ■ion stage before Garrick appeared, a.d as his blaze of excel lence ilire ■ all others into compara tive iusign; .i<lie.' she never forgave him ijtl took every opportunity of venting her spleen. She was coarse, rude and violent in her temper and spared nol< !y. One night as Carriel; was perform ing "King Lear" she stood behind Iho cone to oi'-.—ve him and.in spite of the r nigh:' ■ I her nature, was so deeply affected that she sobbed one minute and abused hint the next, and at length, overcome by his pathetic touches she hurried from the place with the following extraordinary trib ute to the "iveisalily of his powers: "Hang him! I believe lie could act a gridiron." T. IVs Weekly. It VVc.5 Tantamount. "Has she told you that she loved you ?" "Not in so many words. She merely asked me what lif • insurance 1 car lied." Fortune irive too i inch to many, but to none enough. MarMal. t 5 : " r .TCTEaSK wwmmmasMW'wmdiii., »jwwmw ggraaaglßEggggMß——B—BMtt3SU '.itfMumumi. .■rerrtß^ I Arrow Brand Collars and Cuffs in \ Sizes I Crawford's and T-jP Vf « * I? Iff* We have a flne.line James Mean's Shoes AA IU U. ±jIKC of Men's and Boys' To wear clothes that are just a little different from the HfVtsill3.il Colors and We have them in all lest, you want to look at, and try on some of our latest styles. tlie latest sizes and styles and varsity suits, made, grossly for us by Browns in Derby and ~~~ Hart, Shaffner & Marx to look for a good suit The new lltttlc ,deas in v ockc <* 111 the out of the iront Monarch, Silver and case or a trunk. You of the Coat, the cufts on the sleeves, the trousers-a lot of p , Qhirtc. Wo Can find tliem at our new smart id eas ]n these suits will certainly please you. we H store at reasonable Jhe new fashions are exceptionally beautiful, and we can have SL nice line of I prices, and you can show you the pick of them. them and up to date. | IlooVing\m- hat 7 °" 8-16 S!ore is l(le Home Df SliaffdeP 6ta Clothes j W ork°sMrts ne line of I | A Q fi |I7 O LJ A 13131 Opposite Post Office JHOI Li: 1 IMI Inl v J EMPORIUM, FA. S Libby Prison Diarrhoea Relieved. Kdward E. Henry, with the United States Express Co., Chicago, writes: li Our General Superintendent, Mr. handed 111 c a bottle of Chamberlain's Colic, Cholera and Diarrhoea Remedy some time ago to check an attack of the old Libby Prison diarrhoea, 112 have used it since that time and cured many on our trains who have been sick. lam an old soldier who served with Rutherford 15. Hayes and William McKinley four years in the 23d Ohio Regiment, and have no ailment except Libby Prison diarrhoea, which this remedy stops at once." For sale by L. Taggart. Take Kodol whenever you feel that you need it. That is the only time you need to take Kodol. Just when you need it; then you will not be troubled with sour stomach, belching gas on the stomach, etc. Sold by R. C. Dodson. Latest Popular Music. Miss May Gould, teacher of piano forte has received a full line of the lat est and most popular sheet music. All the popular airs. Popular and class ical music. Prices reasonable. 44-tf. Cascasweet is for babies and children, and is especially good for the ills so com mon in hot weather. Look for the in gredients on the bottle. Contains no harmful drugs. Sold by R. C. Dodson. . ———— \ \ \ N V V V V V V V \ vW / Ii * SECON D TO NONE I ADAM, 5 > MELDRUM & < ANDERSON Co. | p 396-408 Main Street, BUFFALO, N. Y. ft | New Fall / / I Dress I I Goods I % ?t We import more, sell /■ / more and carry more Dress '% Goods in stock than all the 112 department stores in Buf- % 112 falo combined. Yon get a % % greater selection here from % / a full range of weaves and / colors. Our large purchases % / and the fact that we deal with producers only enables •J us to save all middlemen's & | \ I % | Send for | Samples I / > yof the new Pall goods. / / Please state the kind and / color you desire and about / / the price you can pay. On / / account of our immense ✓ stock it is impossible to / / samples of all. < / > / ' COME IN PERSON IF POSSIBLE ' / / / Railroad Fares Rebated / , in connection with the / / Chamber of Commerce. / / '/ / y I ADAM, ' 7 MELDRUM & , / ANDERSON CO. | 'A American Block, Buffalo, N.Y. . ' I /\ \ V V S.N V V VV V ,\ V Grove City College. Mummer Term begins June i3rd—lasts eight oeks. Largest Summer Sohool in i'ellnsylva 11 ia. Thirty-eight Professors and Lecturers, (three from Great Britain.) Special work in English and Philosophy. Schools of Normal and Colleg iate Branches. Pedagogy, Music, Art, Commer cial Branches, Stenography and Typewriting. Students can get any work desired. *40.00 will cover all necessary expenses. Address President Keller, Grove City, Pa. 28-3t. English Spavin Liniment removed Hard, Soft or Calloused Lumps and Blemishes from horses; also Blood Spavins, Curbs, Splints, Sweeney, Ring Bone, Stifles, Sprains, Swollen Throats, Coughs, etc. Save SSO by use of one bottle. A wonderful Blemish Cure. Sold by L.Taggart, druggist. 32-lyr Lives Without Heart. We have heard of people living with out any heart in the purpose of their lives. If you lack snap and ginger ia your wordiy pursuits, it may quickly be supplied by using Soxiue Pills, tliD tonic that cures all forms of nerve weakness. No matter what your weakness is, if it is at all of a nervous nature, it can be cur ed by Sexine Pills. If tbey fail, the coupons in the boxes are good for the re turn of your money. Price $1 a box, G boxes Ba. with full guarantee. Address or call R. C. Dodson, Druggist, Empori um, Pa., where they sell all the principal remedies and do not substitute. In addition to our up-to-date line of 112 Ladies Furnishing Goods We carry thousands of novelties We have the exclusive Agency for The Cadet Stockings Scientific Stockings for Men, Women, Boys and Girls. Sensible, satisfying, scientific Cadet Stockings, reinforced with Linen. Every pair guaranteed. Prce 25 cents the pair. Continued Bargains in Suits, Skirts, Shirt Waists ' Dress Goods, Hosiery, Underwear, Embroidery and Laces, Ribbons and Notions. | __ I Special Millinery 1 I One Half Off Regular Pirce I iyi 1 || I EMPORIUM, J OPPOSITE POST OFFICE. ■ MI IMMMKIIJ —— $ | The Bargain ) ji Store | ( Fruits -- Vegetables j i Arriving daily and going at \ ( the lowest possible prices. ( ) Pine Apples, 3 } Cucumbers, Cabbage, \ i New Potatoes, > \ Bermuda Onions. i > Remember I am handling i \ Presh and Smoked Meats of all > \ kinds. Bacon, Hams, Boiled \ < Ham, Bologna. c i Fine Line Groceries \ I Free delivery anywhere. i 112 Phone your orders. J T.W.WELSH | 112 Chas. Diehl's Old Stand, West Ward
Significant historical Pennsylvania newspapers