2 CAMERON COUNTY PRESS. ' H. H. MULLIN, Editor. Published Every Thursday. TERMS OP SUBSCRIPTION. ft T ysar K 00 V paid la advance 1 so ADVERTISING RATES: Advertisements are published at the rate ot rsa doliar per square for one insertion and tlfly mtt per square for each subsequent insertion. Rates by the year, or for six or three months, kr» low and uniform, and will be furnished on application. Legal and Official Advertising per square, three titties or less, 12; each subsequent inser tion iO cents per square. Local notices in cents per line for one Inser sertlon: 5 cents per line lor each subsequent son*eoutive Insertion. Obituary notices over five lines. 10 cents per line. Simple announcements of births, mar riages and deaths will be Inserted free. Business cards, five lines or less. 46 per year; over Ave lines, at the regular rates of adver ts slag. No local Inserted for less than 75 cents per Issue. JOB PRINTING. The Job department of the PHESS incomplete and affords facilities for doing the best class of Work. PARTICILAH ATTENTION PAID TO LAW PRINTING. No paper will be discontinued until arrear ages are paid, except at the option of the pub lisher. Papers sent out of the county must be paid for in advance. The West in the Lead. The west as a whole is far beyond the east in iis abatement of the smoke nuisance. In St. Paul some four years ago, the work was given over to the department of health, whose first act was to lay the following question be fore the local and national unions of steam engineers and firemen: "Can the smoke nuisance as it. exists to-day be reasonably prevented without in jury to trade and manufacturing inter ests?" This question was unanimous ly answered in the affirmative by the members of both unions. Notices were jtaken in all dubious cases and lines were imposed when necessary, a mini mum fine of $25 for the first offense, doubled for each succeeding one. The work has been most, successful, and besides an abatemement of smoke, a saving of fuel is reported. In Milwau kee an ordinance which has gone through periods of relaxation and others of strict enforcement, has been successful when properly managed, continues Hollis Godfrey in the Atlan tic. About half the city at the time of a recent report used smoke-con suming devices, about one-fourth used hard coal or smokeless fuel. The gen eral condition of the city was admir able. So admirable, indeed, that the title of the ordinance passed by the common council is worth quoting in full as an epitome of what such an ordinance should be. No proposition could be more thor oughly in keeping with the eternal fit ness of things than that which has reference to a national "Lincoln high way" from Washington to Gettysburg. The plan in outline is to construct a road between the points mentioned, a distance of 72 miles, to be a memorial to the martyred president. It is in tended to make the highway as perfect a road as can be devised. In time, if constructed and maintained as in tended, it would become one of the most notable sights. Kept in thorough condition, a great driveway through a park-like border, with residences, statuary and other features, the high way would be a magnificent public road, remarks the Troy (N. Y.) Times. And as a direct connecting link be tween Washington and Gettysburg, with both of which Lincoln's fame is inseparably connected, what could be more appropriate? The Zeppelin airship is it. Until some other invention can skim the air like a bird and respond as does this marvelous machine to the will of man, the count's probable conquest of air must place his discovery at the top of the line. Since a king and queen have gone riding on this Zeppelin cloud, we shall soon hear of lesser lights ascend ing, though, since Germany holds the copyright on such aerial travel, it will be some time before the count's inven tion can be as popunlar as the bicycle or the automobile. No doubt, it is destiny that man should have wings and fly. But don't let Count Zeppelin be too airy. He may come a cropper yet. There is a great deal of food for thought in the statement of Chicago's Salvation Army officers that since their anti-suicide bureau was started, about a year ago, 400 men and women have applied for advice. According to the army officials a large proportion of these would have taken their lives if the bureau had not intervened. If that is so, Mr. Carnegie might properly recognize the Salvation Army among the life savers. Mrs. Russell Sage sits down hard on Ihe proposition to change the name of Sag Harbor to "Sage Harbor" in her honor, and even suggests that she pre fers a return to the old-fashioned spell ing of the name, which was "Sagg Harbour." Mr. Brander Matthews and his fellow-simple spellers ought to e' a circular to Mrs. Sage. In order to have "live spokes" newly sawed timber must be well racked up and laid in the open air one year to the inch to season. The average auto mobile spoke requires a two-inch piece of timber; that means two years of idle lumber. "ME AND JACK. (After a Well-Known Print.) OUTLOOK IS GOOD MIDDLE WEST STATES ARE SAFELY REPUBLICAN. With Crop Prospects Fine and Busi ness Improving the People are Enthusiastic for the Safe Ticket. One of the common statements made nowadays Is that the result of the election and the coming of good times will both depend to a very large extent upon the conditions in the states just beyond the Middle West. The Boston Transcript is publishing a most interesting series of letters from the centers of the country containing answers to questions about crops, business anti the political outlook. These come not from the usual politi cal prophets, but from banks, mer chants, manufacturers and other rep resentative authorities. They are from conservative men, who express themselves in moderate language. The latest instalment of these replies cov ers the Prairie states—Kansas, Ne braska, lowa, Minnesota and the Da kotas. From these reports and opinions we get cheeer for the future. Kansas has splendid crops in parts, fair crops in parts and better than average crops on the whole and better than in 1907. The prospects for improvement in business are good. All the advices are to the effect that Taft will carry the state by a big majority. Nebraska seems to be in fine shape. "Our crop outlook is the very best and if nothing unforseen happens we shall have a banner year," says the report from Omaha, and practically every business center sends news of a bumper crop and of Improvement in trade. All the letters say Taft will carry the state. Excessive rains have drowned out some of the corn of lowa, but other wise the state is in superb condition. Some sections report bumper crops, while others are less enthusiastic. Crop prospects are ahead of 1907, Better business is expected, and Taft will carry the state by a very big ma jority. This report sums up the score of letters from Minnesota and the two Dakotas: "Fall conditions and crop prospects were never better. The writer within the last two or three weeks has been in the states of North and South Dakota, as well as Minne sota, and in all three of our states the people are very optimistic regard ing conditions and have just cause for being so. From all appearances there should be large crops in all those states this year." Crops better than in 1907, business Improving and Taft in the lead —this is the message which the Prairie states send to the country.—Baltimore American. 1896—1908. W. J. Bryan was nominated in 1596 as an extreme radical and beaten. Four years later he was again nomi nated, but was not quite so extreme as in IS9G, and again he was beaten. In 1908 he is nominated for the third time, on a platform called by the mystifying name of "conservative rad ical," and though he secures the sup port of such conservatives as Thomas M. Osborne he loses the sup port of such radicals \4 Thomas E. \Vatson and W. 11. Hearst. The in clinations of Mr. Bryan toward "con servatism," seem to have kept pace with his growth in flesh and worldly goods. It is an interesting study. With a clear million and himself weighing 300 pounds, would Mr. Bry an be n safe and sane Democrat?— New York Evening Sun. Perhaps it is a mere coincidence that the number of The Commoner in which Mr. Bryan announces that he has turned it over to be run by others during the campaign contains a poem entitled "Lonely," which begins thus: "O, but it's dull and lonesome, and the house is strangely still." CAMERON COUNTY PRESS, THURSDAY SEPTRMBER 3, 1908. CAN MR. CONNORS DELIVER? "Fingy" Promises New York State to Mr. Bryan, but— Asseverates William J.—alias "Fin gy"—Connors, august though disfig ured state chairman of the Democracy in N'ew York: "There is no question about N'ew York state which will give pluralities of anywhere from 75,000 to 100,000 for Bryan." Mow grossly yet subtly deceptive are mere physical appearances! The frowns and the tightly-shut lips which, on the part of some charac terized the 80 some minutes of Bryan cheering in Denver were not signi ficant. The fact that "Fingy" Con nors himself Eat there lugubrious of brow as Charon and silent as the sphinx; the fact that he glared into silence any impressionable New York delegate that showed symptoms of joining the chorus; the fact that New York was one of the six chilling states sternly to repress the adoration of Bryan and to show indifference, even disdain, of the Peerless One all throughout the delirious hour and something—all these phenomena mean, then, merely that "Fingy" Con ners is undemonstrative and at the bottom of that within him which cor responds to a heart he loves Mr. Bryan dearly. At least we shall see if all the New York Democracy is possessed of the same power of utili tarian love and repression. NOT SAFE IN BRYAN'S HANDS. Next President Must Reorganize the Supreme Court. Harper's Weekly points out that the most serious and important work of the next president will be the virtual reorganization of the supreme court. Four justices will have passed the re tiring age when Taft or Bryan goes to the White House—Chief Justice Fuller, 75; Justice Harlan, 75; Justice Brewer, 71; and Justice Peckham, 70 in November. It is pretty well under stood why the chief justice and Justice Harlan have aot availed themselves of their privilege to retire; they have re garded it as a duty to remain on the bench so long as the country had a president more than likely to name as their successors men in sympathy with new and revolutionary methods of "interpreting" the constitution and the laws. Quite likely Justice Brewer, perhaps the strictest constructionist, as he is probably our ablest jurist, has been influenced by the same consid eration. But it is too much to expect or ash that these patriotic men remain at the post of duty for another four years; so it is altogether probable that the next president will have the naming of four or even five, an actual majority of our supreme court. What kind of men would Bryan appoint? His rec ord and his words leave no room for doubt. Debs to Gompers. We are glad to be able to agree oc casionally wiih Comrade Debs, presi dential candidate of the Socialist party. In liis spirited challenge to Mr. Gompers to a debate on the Demo cratic injunction plank. Comrade Debs refers contemptuously to that curious ly warped hit of lumber as meaning less and "simply a bait to catch the unions." Judge Taft, who is a pretty fair law #er, has confessed his inability to un riddle this delphic plank of Mr. Bryan's, which is ambiguously worded to catch two different sets of voters. Like the ingenious darky's coon trap, It is set "for to eotch 'em a-comin' and a-goin'." This is a great year for all kinds of bait for political gudgeons. But Gompers is no gudgeon: and we ex pect he will declfne to bite at the bait dangled before him by Comrade Dobs who needs a little campaign advertise- Tnent in his business. —Milwaukee Sen tinel. 10 PUT LID ON ATLANTIC CITY NEW JERSEY'S GOVERNOR SAYS HE MAY CALL OUT THE STATE'S MILITIA. LIQUOR LAWS ARE IGNORED. Grand Jury Indicts a Gambler and a Postal Card Dealer, But Refuses to Indict Saloonkeepers in Atlantic City. Atlantic City, N. J. The ac tion of Gov. Fort, in issuing a proc lamation to the people of New Jersey threatening to send troops into this famous resort to enforce the state liquor laws unless the people of At lantic City observe the law caused a sensation Thursday among the resi dents and the thousands of summer visitors. Close on the heels of the governor's proclamation another sensation was sprung at Mays Landing, the county seat of Atlantic county, when the grand jury absolutely refused to obey the instructions of the court to return indictments against excise violators. Supreme Court Justice Thomas W. Trenchard, who had been requested by Gov. Fort, to sit with the county judge, was so incensed at the action of the grand jury that he instantly discharged it with a severe repri mand. After reporting two indictments against the alleged proprietor and steward of the so-called Millionaires' club in Chelsea, on a charge of gamb ling, and one indictment against an obscene postal card dealer, the grand jury was dismissed Thursday with out finding any indictments against Atlantic City saloonkeepers. Justice Trenchard scored the jurors severely. Joseph Salus, foreman, replied that the prosecutor had refused to lay evi dence of more gambling cases before them until they had first considered liquor cases. Salus closed the pro ceedings by saying that the jury was not ashamed of what it hail done. WAS BETRAYED FOR REWARD Cousin of a Murderer Leads the Lat ter Into a Trap and He Is Killed. Indianapolis, Ind. —Sheriff Bryant of Monroe county, Ky., and one of his deputies on Thursday produced the body of Jesse E. Coe, a negro, who has been wanted in this city since September 30, 1906. On the night of that date Patrolmen Sullivan and Pet icard were killed in an alley by twc negroes whom the officers had seen breaking into a house. George Will iams, one of the> negroes, was cap tured and hanged. Jesse Coe, the other, had since been a fugitive in his native hills near Marlinsburg, Ky. Sheriff Bryant was paid $1,500 by Mayor Bookwalter upon the identifi cation of the body of Coe which the sheriff and his deputy had brought here. Coe's whereabouts was betrayed tc Sheriff Bryant by Claude Andrews, a cousin of Coe, who will get S6OO oi the reward. The sheriff and three deputies lay in ambush at a place in the mountains agreed upon with An drews; who had enticed Coe to the spot on the prtense of hunting squir rels. Here the officers came upon him. Coe was armed with a rifle. He refused to surrender and attempted to shoot, but the officers were first and shot him to death. FLOODS IN GEORGIA. Ten or 15 Lives Lost and Much Prop erty Destroyed in and Around Augusta. Augusta, Ga. —The flood waters at Augusta began receding Thurs day afternoon, having reached the height of 40 feet, probably as high as the flood of 1888. Between ten and 15 persons were drowned, most of them negroes. Rain has ceased in the upper valley and there is no danger of further dam age. The loss is between $750,000 and $1,000,000 and consists of damage to stocks of goods and private property, losses on the streets, destruction of bridges across the Savannah river, and breaks in the canal banks. As eight cotton mills are dependent on the canal for power, thousands of mill operatives will be idle three or four months. While the flood was at its height five fires broke out. The McDaniel builders' material establish ment in North Augusta was burned, as were also a train of 40 cars belong ing to the Southern railway. Nixon's lime, cement and hardware house and a huge quantity of lumber belonging to the Georgia railway was burned. Ex-Senator Vilas Dies. Madison, Wis. —Col. William F. Vilas, who was postmaster general and secretary of the interior during President Cleveland's first administra tion and afterward was United States senator from Wisconsin, died here Thursday. Sage's Estate Amounted to $64,000,000. New York City. Russell Sage's estate is valued at $64,153,800. This fact became known Thursday for the first time through the signing of the order for the transfer tax. A VERY MYSTERIOUS AFFAIR i WEALTHY BALTIMOREAN IS SHOT WHILE AT ATLANTIC CITY. Police Claim That Revenge Prompted the Shooting—As Usual, There's a Woman in ihe Case. Atlantic City, N. J. Refusing to accept the stories to the effect that Charles B. Roberts, a wealthy clubman of Baltimore, was shot by a highwayman while in a rolling chair on the board walk with Mrs. W. S. G. Williams, also of Baltimore, on Wed nesday night, the police of this city are working upon the theory that Rob erts was the victim of a vengeful man. While they will not Bay that they believe Mrs. Williams' husband knows something about the shooting, they admit that he will not be eliminated from the case until he has proved conclusively that he not only was not in Atlantic City, but that he was en tirely ignorant of the shooting and the circumstances which led up to it. So determined are they in this di rection that Detective Harry Wilson was sent to Baltimore Friday to make a thorough investigation. Their attitude in the matter was taken when the parties involved de clared that Mr. Roberts had been held up by a highwayman on the board walk. The authorities accept such statements as a reflection on the manner in which board walk strollers are protected and the promenade po liced. The wounded man is at the City hospital. His condition is considered dangerous and the physicians will not probe for the bullet in his liver until liis condition improves. They fear that to operate upon him now might prove fatal. Mrs. Williams s at the Hotel Brigh ton, and while the police will not say that she is detained as a witness, they lead inquirers to believe that such is the case. The colored man who was pushing the rolling chair in which Roberts and Mrs. Williams were riding at the time of the shooting is still locked up, and if he knows who Mr. Roberts' assailant is he declines to make known his identity. BUSINESS BULLETIN. Gradual Improvement Continues and Crop Prospects Are Satis factory. New York City.—R. G. Dun & Co.'s Review of Trade says: Gradual improvement continues, es pecially in respect to the percentage of manufacturing plants in operation, and country merchants are more dis posed to replenish stocks. Retail trade is seasonably quiet, except where sales are stimulated by clear ance sales, but wholesale and jobbing houses are doing a good fall business, although collections are irregular. With the exception of the cotton mills, there is much less idle machin ery in the leading industries. Sev eral wage agreements have been signed and there is little strife be tween capital and labor. Crop prospects are satisfactory and producers obtain unusually high prices. Contracts are placed more freely for steel, new business includ ing a large tonnage of plate and pipe. FIFTEEN LIVES LOST IN FLOOD Town of Folsom, N. M., Suffers From a Cloudburst. Trinidad, Col. —Flood in the Cim maron river following a cloudburst washed away a number of dwell ings at Folsom, N. M., Thursday night. Fifteen persons are reported to have been drowned. Eleven bodies have been recovered. Ten miles of track and 12 bridges on the Colorado & Southern railway were washed out. The entire town was swept by the flood caused by the cloudburst. Sev eral houses were swept away com pletely and nearly every house in the town was damaged. Searching parties have been formed and it is expected as many more bodies will be found. Folsom is in the northeastern part of New Mexico, near Raton on the Santa Fe railroad. A DISASTER IN A MINE. Five Men Killed in a Collision of Cars Far Under Ground. Wilkesbarre, Pa. —Five men were instantly killed, another is expected to die and eight others were seriously injured in a collision late Friday aft ernoon at the Warrior Run colliery of the Lehigh Valley Coal Co., six miles from this city. The men were being hoisted up a slope when a runaway mine car struck a train of mine cars on which were 20 men who were employed in the mine. Only six of them escaped in juries. Those killed were horribly mangled. Flood Made 3,000 People Homeless. Fayetteville, N. C. This city, with a population of 12,000 and located on the Cape Fear river, is almost entirely submerged because of the flood. Three thousand persons are homeless and an appeal has been issued for relief. George P. Rowell Dies. Poland Springs, Me. George P. Rowell of New York, prominent for many years in the newspaper adver tising business, died here last night, aged 70 years. OPEN DEALING IN PAINT, Buying paint used to be like the proverbial buying of a "pig in a poke." Mixtures in which cha!k„ ground rock, etc., predominated were marked and sold as "Pure White Lead," the deception not being ap parent until the paint and the paint ing were paid for. This deception is still practiced, but we have learned to expose it easily. National Lead Company, the larg est makers of genuine Pure White Lead, realizing the injustice that was being done to both property owners and honest paint manufacturers, set about to make paint buying safe. They first adopted a trade mark, the now famous "Dutch-Boy Painter," and put this trademark, as a guaranty of purity, on every package of thef White Lead. They tnen set abr familiarizing the public with ' blow-pipe test by which the pin and genuineness of White Lead be determined, and furnished a b pipe free to every one who w write them for it. This action wa itself a guaranty of the purity of tional Lead Company's White Lead As the result of this open dealir, the paint buyer to-day has only hin self to blame if he is defrauded. Poi test outfit and valuable booklet on painting, address National Lead Com pany, Woodbridge Bldg., New York. •HE WAS NO HASBEEN. Smoking Car Just the One Old Woman- Was Looking For. "Madam," said the brakeman as the train stopped at a village station and a little old woman started to enter the smoking car, "the car back is the one you want." "How do you know?" she tartly asked. "Because this is the smoking car." She pushed past him and climbed up the steps, and after taking a seat she pulled out and filled a pipe, struck a match on the sole of her shoe, and after drawing a few puffs she said to a man smoking a cigar across the aisle: "That young feller out there don't know half as much as he thinks he does." "How so?" was asked. "He took me for an old woman that had never rode on the cars before, ana told me this was the smoking car." "And you wanted this car?" "Why, I never ride in any other— not unless my pipe is broke, my to bacco all out and none o' you men folks will lend me a cigar." ONE EXCEPTION. Easy Edmund—lt's one uv de frail ties uv our poor human nature dat no matter how much a man gits he wants more. Drather Sitdown (thoughtfully)— Oh, I dunuo 'bout dat. Not in a police court he don't. Progress. "Yes," Raid Mrs. Malaprop, "my boy is doing first-rate at school. I sent him to one o' them alimentary schools, and his teacher says he's do ing fine. He's a first-class sculler, they tell me, and is head of his clas& in gastronomy, knows his letters by sight, and can spell like one o' these deformed spellers down to Washing ton." "What's he going to be when he grows up?" "He wants to be an undertaker, and I'm declined to humor him, so I've told the confessor to pay special intention to the dead languages," said the proud mother. —Harper's. FRIENDLY TIP Restored Hope and Confidence. After several years of indigestion, and its attendant evil influence on the mind, it is not very surprising that one finally loses faith in things gen erally. A N. Y. woman writes an interesting letter. She says: "Three years ago I suffered from an attack of peritonitis which left me in a most miserable condition. For over two years I suffered from nerv ousness, weak heart, shortness of breath, could not sleep, etc. ',' My appetito was ravenous, but I felt starved all ihe time. I had plenty of food but it did not nourish me because of intestinal indigestion. Med ical treatment did not seem to help, I got discouraged, stopped medicine and did not care much whether I lived or died. "One day a friend asked me why I didn't try Grape-Nuts, stop drinking' coffee, and use Postum. I had lost faith in everything, but to please my friends I began to use both and soon, became very fond of them. "It wasn't long before I got some strength, felt a decided change in my system, hope sprang up in my heart and slowly but surely I got better. I could sleep very well, the constant craving for food ceased and I have better health now than before the at tack of peritonitis. "My husband and I are still using Grape-Nuts and Postum." "There's a Reason." Name given by Postum Co., Battle Creek, Mich. Read, "The Road to Wellville," in pkgs. Ever read the above letter? A new one appears from time to time. They are genuine, true, and full of human Interest.