2 mm county PHEsa. H. 11. MULLIN. Editor. Published livery Thursday. TERMS OF SUBSCRIPTION. Per year 12 00 It paid in advance 1 uU ADVERTISING RATES: Advertisements are published at the rate of f»oe dollar per square forotie insertion ami fifiy rents per square fur each subsequent insertion. Rates by the year, or for six or three months, •re low and uniform, and will be furnished on application. Legnl and Official Advertising per square, three times or less, J2: each subsequent inser tion fO rents per > quare. Local notices 10cents per lino for one inser •ertlon: 6 cents per line for each subsequent •on«ecutive Insertion. Obituary notices over five lines, 10 cents per line. Simple announcements of births, tnar tiages and deaths will be inserted free. Business cards, live lines or less. 45 per year, over five lines, at the regular rales of adver t sing. No local Inserted for less than 75 cents per Issue. JOB PRINTING. The Job department of the PRESS iscomplet* and affords facilities for doing the best class of work. PARTICULAR ATTENTION PAIUTO LAW PRINTINO. No paper will be discontinued until arrear ages are paid, except at the option of the pub- Usher. Papers sent out of the county must be paid lor in advance. How Blind Children Are Trained. In the New York state school for the blind at Batavia, some of the best work for the blind is being accom plished. It is, in fact, becoming a standard school, and is showing re markable results as to what can be done in the way of bodily improve ment from carefully studied physical training, says the Craftsman. It is making self-reliance a most valued possession of children who would other wise go through life trembling with fear and with outstretched hands to ward off peril. The physiciai culture work at Batavia is divided into eight classes: kindergarten, primary boys and primary girls, intermediate boys and intermediate girls, junior boys, senior boys and senior girls. Children in the kindergarten are trained by marching and simple exercises with musical dumbbells. They graduate to rings and wand exorcises in the pri mary classes and attain to barbells in the junior year. In the senior classes boys are exercised with dumbbells and chest weights and by running and military marches. The senior girls use dumbbells, barbells and Indian clubs, and are also trained in marches. NVork is given outside of the regular hours to those whose interests or needs are greater. Exiles No Longer. In the numerous articles appearing from time to time on the progress of the home cure of tuberculosis nearly ail the emphasis is made upon the purely scientific side —upon the won ders of modern medicine, of modern experiments and modern achieve ments. And that the scientific strides in the treatment of tuberculosis are little short of marvelous, says the Louisville Courier-Journal, is not to be denied. It is greatly to the credit of the medical profession that it has dem onstrated in the abstract the curabili ty of the disease, and then in the con crete has wrought the cure at the patient's own home. But there is the sentimental, the mental, the "heart" side of the revolution which, while spoken of little, is not its least impor tant aspect. Under the home treat ment it is no longer necessary te make exiles of loved ones—to banish the tuberculosis patients to the dis tant lands of the west, there to while away their hours in isolation, home sickness, introspection and dread. Holland for some unaccountable rea son is putting off the spanking of Castro, although for some time past it has had an official permit from the na tions of the earth and several generous offers to hold its coat. Castro must bear a charmed life. For one who has been threatened with terrible lickings for so many years he certainly looks healthy and robust and good for many happy returns of the ultimatums. Many schemes are being put forward for the securing of universal peace, but Castro has them all beaten. He has tried his and it works. Just what It is no one seems to know, but cer tainly it is fine medicine for the ward ing off of an impending war. Perhaps he is guarding Hie secret jealously un til such time as he can bottle the dope and put it on the markets of the world. A man in New Jersey was tried for the murder of three people, found in sane and sent to an asylum, all in the same day. There are some things about Jersey justice which other com munities might do well to imitate, re marks the Baltimore American, espe cially those in which the » 'g delay in dragging out criminal V for days, weeks and months is Vial to th« authorities and turn »ts into sensational melodrai i?. the masses, depriving tht jrts of both dignity and efficiency it now appears that when Queen Victoria of Spain recently visited Kng land it was a regular ease of"going home to mother," just like the ordin ary wife who has grievances to be re dressed. In this can* it was the for mality of Spanish etiquette, and the spirit of the Knglish girl will probably break the chains which have for eratloiiH held royal domestic life In Spain. FRIEND OF WORKER FAIRNESS OF JUDGE TAFT BEYOND ALL DISPUTE. His Decision in the Narrsmore Case Has Been of Inestimable Bene fit to All Who Labor for Wages. Those who have attempted to make it appear that Mr. Taft is an enemy of the worker because his decisions have at times been anything but agreeable to labor unions carefully omitted all reference to the decision of Judge Taft in the Narramore case. The laws passed for the protection of workingmen had been ignored by a number of the big corporations and when a man was mutilated or killed the employers would set up the doc trine of "assumed risk," that is, that the workman by continuing to work although the required safeguards had not been provided assumed all liability for accident. Courts in all parts of the country had declared in this sense until Judge Taft came to pass upon it. Railway companies had been or dered to block all frogs, but for eight years had neglected to do so. Switch man Narramore was caught in one and left a cripple. The lower courts had decided that he had no case, but Judge Taft held that the laws of this kind were passed in the interest of the state as much as of the citizen, for it was in the interest of the state that its citizens should not be crippled and so placed in a condition in which they could not aid in its defense. It was also in the interest of the state that a workingman's family should not be pauperized by the mutilation of its breadwinner. On these grounds a man had no right to assume such a risk, as he was thereby injuring the interests of the state. This principle has been adopted by the courts of nearly every state in (he country, as well as the United States, and it has led to the block ing of frogs, the covering of cogged wheels and the guarding of machin ery. It has been the greatest relief for the worker granted by a court in many years. MR. ROOT'S TIMELY DECISION. Secretary's Decision Reflects Honor on Himself and Country. The Importance of Secretary Root's refusal to grant the extradition of Jan Pouren is not measured by the inter est of this particular fugitive from Russian oppression. The decision confirms the opinion expressed in Mr. Root's recent letter to Mr. Schiff, that the unsatisfactory attitude of Russia on the question of citizenship rights should be pressed for immedi ate consideration. The Russian resort to a technicality for preventing the proper admission of new evidence in the hearing on Pouren's case, a de vice promptly rebuked by Secretary Root, will do much to bring about a crisis in this discussion. Russia, un der the existing, antiquated treaty, does not recognize the right of ex patriation, and consequently does not recognize American citizenship and passports from this country. To be sure, there has been no effort at St. Petersburg toward an extreme en forcement of the Russian i>osition, which would make every Russian emigrant who sought American citi zenship a criminal. The principle is still maintained, and an attempt might be made to enforce the law if circumstances warranted such action in the minds of the czar's police au thorities. Citizenship rights should be better defined. The effort of Secretary Root to bring Russia into line with the rest of the civilized world in the rec ognition of international rights will be approved for reasons other than in terest in Jan Pouren. Southern Need of Protection. The Augusta Chronicle does well to bring to the attention of the cotton manufacturers of Georgia the increas ing menace of competition from the cotton mills of Germany. Fidelity to home interests is an admirable trait. Like the circus clown quoted by Gov. Shaw in one of his recent speeches as saying: "Of all my father's family I love mysolf the best," the Chronicle rightly warms to the welfare of its own locality. So it performs a useful function in bringing into larger notice tin article in the Chattanooga Trades man concerning the gigantic strides made by German mills in the spinning and weaving of cotton for export to the markets of the world. It is of Im portance to southern cotton manufac turers to know that Germany is rapid ly increasing her exports of cotton jams and textiles to the United States. Says the Chronicle: "Our bill for textiles made out of American cotton by German machin ery and bought from German produc ers, has increased from $14,000,000 to 1003 to over $18,000,000 annually at the present time." As to what should be done about It the Chronicle, however, has nothing to say. But the inference is plain that cotton manufacturing in the south must have adequate protection against German competition. That is the exact truth. Could not the Chron lele forget its allegiance to Hryan and his tree-trade doctrines long enough to say so? The Republican party does not be lit-ye that industrial threatcutting Is a duty of tariff surgery. Its policy of tariff revision doei, not include the d structlon of the rivals of the trust.; tv way of freeing them front trust cor,; petition. CAMERON COUNTY PRESS, THURSDAY NOVEMBER 19, 1908. ALWAYS OPPOSED TO BRYAN. Cleveland's Uttera-ces Leave No Doubt as to His Position. Leaving, as the Dispatch has done, the question of the genuineness of the disputed Cleveland article published on August 30 to be determined by the evidence alleged to exist, but apparent ly impossible to extract except by legal proceedings, one pertinent fact remains. That is that there is no doubt of Mr. Cleveland's opposition to i:nd distrust of Bryan, any more than there is of the contumely and hatred of the Bryan clement toward Cleve land—until it was deemed necessary to try to mollify the Cleveland wing with soft words. There are three expressions from Mr. Cleveland 011 ibis point. The iirst was in bis speech at the Reform club banquet of 1597, when he declared: "it was a rude awakening for the negligent and over-confident, and a day of terror for sober and patriotic men, when the bold promoters of this reckless mob captured the organiza tion of a powerful political party, and, seizing its banners, shouted defiance to the astonished conscience and con servatism of the country." The same dlsheartenment at the ad herence of Democracy to Bryanism was expressed in conversation with the late Henry Loomis Nelson, and published by Mr. Nelson, with Mr. Cleveland's knowledge, in a letter to Harper's Weekly in April of this year. Finally his letter of July 14, 1908, to Mr. Reeves stated: "I note what you say in regard to the unfortunate plight of Democracy. I am dumfounded when I see its ap parent willingness to turn again to Bryanism sugar-coated, but other wise unehanged—as manifested by the cool and characteristically modest in terview of 'The Peerless' published in the newspapers of yesterday." He is a very poorly informed per son who does not know that these were Mr. Cleveland's real sentiments. He was not like organs that need no naming, of the mental texture that swallows convictions, and advocates what they do not believe, at the be hest of a party conviction. What he thought of Bryanism in 1897, in 1906, and in April, 1908, he undoubtedly thought up to the day of his death. — Pittsburg Dispatch. Misrepresentation by the Commoner. In Mr. Bryan's Commoner there ap pears an article attempting to show that the Merchants' Association of New York has gone on record in favor of guaranteeing bank deposits. The inference sought to be suggested by the Commoner is that when the Mer chants' association indorsed the Fowler bill, which did, indeed, seek to make deposits more secure, it ap proved the principle of the Hryan guarantee scheme. The truth is that the Fowler pro gram no more resembles the Bryan I lan than the gold standard is like the sixteen-to-one notion. Mr. Fowler, the author of the bill referred to, has denounced Mr. Bryan's policy of guar rnteeing bank deposits as financial in sanity. When the Commoner goes to such lengths in trying to show that one commercial organization at least has indorsed his vicious banking pro gram, great lack of support for the Bryan delusion is thoroughly dem onstrated. Bryan's Greatness. "If all that Mr. Bryan has favored during the last 12 years had been en acted into law we should have been overwhelmed with disaster and would regard it as our chief business in the future to find a way of escape from the meshes of ill-considered legislation in which we should have been entang led. It is fortunate for him as well as for us that he was defeated, and what ever may be his present political po tentiality can be ascribed to the fact that hitherto he has not been permitted to carry out his program." Admirably put, Gov. Hughes. Bryan's greatness arises from the re fusal of the people to let him do what he has wanted to do. He is fascinating because of an attractive personality, a smooth tongue, a plausible program. But the people have repudiated every one of his vagaries and, paradoxical as It may seem, saved him from over throw. Will Regulate Tariff. The Republican party, always prac tical, always efficient, realizes that many and great changes have taken place in industrial conditions and com mercial opportunities In the last de cade. It purposes making the tariff up-to-date in all respects. Duties which have become excessively high will be cut down. If any duties have been outgrown and outworn they may be removed altogether. If there should be found any young or feeble industry which can be developed into healthy and lasting bulk and robust ness in the United States by a little more liberal tariff protection, that aid will doubtless be given. Both Wise and Consistent. President Roosevelt, whose friend ship for labor no man will dispute, and whose heroic efforts in behalf of la bor have been recognized throughout the world, very fitly describes the blacklist and the secondary boycott, pet instruments of Gompers, as "two of the most cruel forin3 of oppression ever devised by the wit of man for the Infliction of suffering on his weaker follows." The more the light Is thrown on this controversy the more will the dema i.oglsin of (lumpers and Bryan appear and the wisdom and statesmanship u' the U'jpublkan part) be indorsed. Eppmrg) and DRILLING MACHINE. How It la Made and How It la Worked. It will be seen from the sketch that the drilling machine is a very simple affair, consisting essentially of a round block of wood about eight inches long and eight inches in diameter, with an iron band ring placed on the top and bottom to prevent splitting. Through Its center and protruding about two Inches below is a smooth round wooden shaft about one and one-fourth inch in diameter and three feet in length. Both ends of this shaft are protected from splitting by a ring or ferrule. The crossbar is a piece of wood about three inches wide, one inch thick and three and one-half feet long, having a hole in the center large enough to allow the bar to move eas ily up and down on the shaft and shaped as shown. The ends of the bar may also be protected by ferrules. A hole is bored in each end of the bar and also in the upper end of the shaft. Through these holes a piece of strong cord or rawhide is passed and drawn tight, with a bar standing, squared, about one inch above the block. The cord is then secured from Hipping in the holes by means of knots and pegs driven in the holes, says the Metal Worker. A drill is inserted in Simple Drilling Machine. the end of this shaft below the block, and may be made from an old hand saw file ground to a triangular point. To set the machine in motion, place the point of the drill on the spot where the hole is to be made, and with the ma chine in an upright position, and while grasping the bar in one hand, with the other turn the shaft around until the bar is raised as high as it will go. Then lay hold of the bar with both hands and press quickly down wards. The weight of the block givea sufficient motion to wind up the cord and raise the bar again, when a sec ond downward motion of the bar causes a revolution in the opposite di rection. In this way the work is ac complished by pressing down on the bar and allowing it to rise again as the cord winds and unwinds upon the revolving shaft. KNOT FOR FOOTBALLS. The Kind of a Tie That Will Not Loosen Up. One of the most prominent English football clubs kept the tying of this knot on the rubber hose of their foot ball a secret and never allowed all of its members to know how it was tied. This tie can be used on grain sacks and numerous other similar instances. Make one loop in the cord, explains Popular Mechanics, and then an other one exactly the same way, as Fjfij A Secure Knot. shown in Fig. 1, placing the end of the cord under the first loop then pull at each end of the cord, as in Jig. 2. Polishing a Varnished Surface. In order to obtain a good surface for polishing, each coat of varnish must be sandpapered, rubbed or mossed down, as a polish can be ob tained only on a surface that is per fectly level. Therefore, the last coat of varnish, when thoroughly dry and hard, must be rubbed with No. 00 steel wool or FF pumice stone and wa ter or oil, following with rotten stone and water or oil, and when perfectly done cleaned off thoroughly to avoid scratches. For producing a very fine polish, says a well-known authority, mix with one pint of shellac that has been cut in grain alcohol one-half pint of raw linseed oil. Shake well every time when applying It to a woolen cloth, rub briskly until the polish is hard and lustrous.—Carpentry and Building. Manganese Steel. Manganese steel In now generally recognized as being the only suitable material for street railway track work where any large amount of truffle Is to be dealt with, and. as is well known by street railway engineers, this ma terial cannot be dealt with by the or dinary cutting tools, i.e., chisels, saws, filed, etc., owing to tlio extremo hardness of the material. , THE MILL DAM. How It Can Be Constructed 60 aa to Be Flood and Ice Proof. It has been discovered that In build ing a rock or stone dam where the bed of the stream is not solid rock and the pour of the water is almost perpendic ular it will undermine and the breast will go away in pieces. Also, logs and ice going over will come back against the breast and batter It to pieces finally. A dam built like the one shown In the sketch will remove a number of obstacles that are very destructive to mill dams, says a correspondent of llilttili FAOHT Ooueie SMKTWNC 3tow! Plan of Construction. American Miller. Anything passing over the breast of this dam will paM off smoothly and never come baok against It. There is no possible chance for undermining from the pour of the water. The abutments at each end of the dam are built of stone and ce ment, and are high enough above the crest to take the entire stream at the time of a flood. Filling with Btone and gravel under the sheathing and filling with dirt on the up-stream side puts the weight well up stream and makes it perfectly secure. The dam is built by sections, each section completed and spiked together and lapping the mud sills as done in framing a barn. This dam is so tied together that the entire structure would have to all go at once to be washed out. In building a dam the breaat should be set square with the stream, if pos sible, and the filling above should be good ground or clay, but no stone, as stone gives a rough surface. The top of the filling should be as compact and smooth as possible. GIANT CONCRETE MIXER. Largest One in Country Being Used in Dam Construction. One of the largest concrete mixers in the country is being used In the work of constructing the Monong*- hela river dam at Brownsville, Pa It has a capacity of 45 cubic yards of concrete an hour and can bo operated The Big Mixer. by one man. It runs along on a tramway as the work progresses. The sand, gravel and cement are raised by an elevator, which places them In the proper bins at the top of the mixer. The sand and gravel hoppers are 18 by 16 feet, and the cement bin five by seven feet. NEW GLASS MAKING. Wonderful Machine That Does Away with the Blowing. We all know that there is one pans of glass for the rich and another for the poor, known respectively as plat* and sheet glass. And while both have essentially the same composition, they differ greatly in the purity of the ina terials used and the method of manu facture. Until a few years ago sheet glass— the windowpane of the multitude—• owed its origin to the blower's breath. But In 1903 Mr. John H. Lubbers of Allegheny, Pa., invented a window glass blowing machine which waa de scribed as "the newest marvel in the industrial affairs of this country." And now, relates the Technical World Magazine, Mr. Irving W. Col burn of Franklin, Pa., has gone one better and perfected—at a cost of s2oo,ooo—a machine which makes glass without blowing it at all —turns it out in a continuous sheet and en ables one man and two boys to ef ficiently perform the work of 13 skilled mechanics. Glue for Leather and Metal. According to Power, a flexible glue for attaching leal her to metals may be made by adding one part of Venetian turpentine to four parts of glue. This mass i 3 heated in a glue pot as usual until it becomes sticky and ceases to give off bubbles. It works best when frosh. California's Oil. Next to gold, petroleum 1B the most valuable mineral product of California. Nothing I Ate Agreed WithM v BODENHAMER. BODENHAMER. Mrs. Lenora Bodenhamer, R. F. I"). li Box 99, Keinersville, N. C., writes: "I suffered with stomach trouble and indigestion for some time, and nothing that I ate agreed with me. I was very nervous and experienced a continual feeling 1 of uneasiness and fear. I took medicine from the doctor, tint it did me no good. "I found in one of your Peruna books a description of my symptoms. 1 then wrote to Dr. Hartman for advice. H# said I had catarrh of tliu stomach. 1 took Peruna and Manalin and followed his directions and can now say that I feel as well as I ever did. "I hope that all who are afflicted with the same Bymptoms will take Peruna, as it has certainly cured me." The above is only one of hundreds who have written similar letters to Dr. Ilartman. Just one such case as this entitles Peruna to the candid ponsider ation of everyone similarly afflicted. If this be trueof the testimony of one per son what ought to be the testimony of hundreds, yes thousands, of honest, sin cere people. We have in our files a great many other testimonials. Neglected Colds and Coughs are the cause of many cases of Pneumonia and Con sumption. No matter how slight your Cough or Cold may be, cure it before it has a chance to do any harm. DR. D JAIME'S Expectorant is the oldest and best known medicine in the world for reliev ing and curing Coughs, Colds, Bronchitis, Pleurisy, Croup, Whooping-Cough, and diseases of thi3 class. Your druggist will supply you. In three siza bottles, SI.OO, 50c. and 25c. Dr. D. Jayne'a Tonic Ver mifuge is an excellent tonic for both adults and children. It is also a safe worm medicine. SICK HEADACHE Positively cured by CARTERS ,heseLu,le p,,,s - They also relieve Dia* »jRKf| m IF tress from Dyspepsia, In- KJI ll# digestion and Too Hearty &9 C £ K Eating. A perfect rem* j&jfl qi I | a Dizziness, Nau- Hgfl r I LL5>. sea, Drowsiness, Bad Taste in the Mouth, Coat- Tongue, Pain in the IB ™ lWa Isiirlo TORPID LIVER. They regulate the Bowels. Purely Vegetable. SMALL PILL. SMALL DOSE. SMALL PRICE. PADTCDCI Genuine Must Bear LAM tno Fac-Simile Signature ISfe M I REFUSE SUBSTITUTES. DITFIITO Wi»f*Oß F.rnlrmun,Wiiih !5" fil I InKton.U.l'. BoukMfrif. lli t l» 1 Lr€ n BLuiu Q west rfefvmiuu. ileal liware of the Cough K|J| t hangs on persiatenCv. 8198 aWnjf your r.if-U'a rrst a.id rVBI auitmf you wiili the violence 4 lM|*,nxyam*. doses MA fully anjir coujjh, no matter 158 ootheaandlie.i!sthelrriutrd ■•icea, clears the closed air agce and the cough disap- HQ rti 3