2 CAIi-ROH COUNTY PRESS. H. H. MULLIN. Editor. rublinhccl Every Thursday. TERMS OF SUBSCRIPTION, for year 12 00 If paid in advance 1 i>o ADVERTISING RATES: AdTtWUemcnls are published at the rate of Pua dollar per square for one Insertion anil lifty rot* rer square for each subsequent Insertion. Rales by the year. or for six or three months, are low and uniform, and will be furnished on application. Legul and Official Advertising per square, three times or less. S~: each subsequent mser tloa 10 cents per ■•quarc. Local notices 1U cents per line for one lnser •ertlon: 5 cents per line for each subsequent «on»ecutlve Insertion. Obituary notices over five llnri 10 cents per line. Simple announcements of births, uiar risdes and deaths will be Inserted free. Business cards, five lines or less, S5 per year, over live lines, at the regular rates of adver tising. No local Inserted for less than 75 cents per Issue. JOB PRINTING. The Job department of (he PnEss Is complete mnd affords facilities for doini; iho best class of W.irU. PAKTICULAK ATTBSI'ION PAID TO LAW PRINTING. No paper will be discontinued until arrear ages are paid, except ai the optiou of the pub lisher. Papers sent out of the county must bo paid lor lu advance. Good Influence of Matrimony. Statistics seem to show that crime ja less frequent among married men than among those enjoying bachelor sxistence. Close observation shows that property rights are more general ly respect<*d by the married than the single. The married man does not commit the graver offenses against property, such as robbery and fraud, go much an the less dangerous crimes, such as receiving stolen goods, break ing the laws of trade, and fraudulent bankruptcy. Men who are married at an early age—from 18 to 25 —offend against property more often than the unmarried of the same age, and mar ried men who are older. This is prob ably explained by the pressure of .'am lly expenses. Offenses against morali ty are far more common among un married men—a fact that was to be expected. Offenses against human life are more frequent among the un married, though the disproportion is not so great as in the matter of rights of property. It is interesting to note, says the New York Weekly, that the criminality of widowers decreases with advancing years, although this is prob ably true of all men. Widowers, how ever, contribute a greater share of crime between the ages of 30 and 50 than either of the other classes. This may be an argument either for or against marriage, according to the point of view. The longer man is mar ried, the more law-abiding he becomes. This may be accounted for not only by the benign influence of matrimony, but also by the fact that the burden of married life incident to the larger birth rate at that time and the finan cial straits of the parents is greater in the early years than. it. is later. This is indicated by the fact that the rate of offenses against property falls off rapidly with advancing years among the married. Saving the Game. With the revulsion of sentiment has come scientific legislation for the pro tection of such game as remains, and in most states the more intelligent huntsmen have themselves been in strumental in promoting the legisla tion. Hut a great deal of educational work remains to be done. The im provement of guns and ammunition, above all the cheapening of their price, has placed weapons in the hands of thousands of undisciplined hunters, who lust, as did their prede cessors of 30 years p.go, for "records." The violation of the game laws is not considered a crime by them," says the New Orleans Times-Democrat. Their only care is to evade detection and prosecution—not a difficult task, be cause of the relative scarcity of game wardens and the trouble experienced in securing evidence to convict the violators of the law. In the future, more than in the past American industries will have to rely upon the especially developed and in structed ability of American working men, including the superintendents and highest managers of industrial es tablishments. Natural resources, de clares the Cleveland Leader, will play a less important part than in the past. The most formidable competition of the coming years will be encountered from Germany and other countries where technical education is most ad vanced, and this country will need workers similarly trained to meet it England's suffragettes have been quiet for a few weeks, but they have only been making ready for another attack on the house of commons. This movement was looked upon as a farce at first and the idea prevailed that it would bo short-lived, but it Ims grown stronger until thousands of women have joined it, among them many of culture, education, rank and title. It can no longer be ignored, and, though the methods employed may not be commended, the earnestness and de termination of itg adherents cannot be called in question. The first Amerlca.ii company for th<- manufacture of airships has been In corporated in Newark, say a I lin New Haven Evening Regibter. That lonki like bringing the thing down out ui the uir to a pus'nesa start, anyway. THE NATION'S JOY WILL REVISE TARIFF PRESIDENT-ELECT TAFT HAS GIVEN PLEDGE TO COUNTRY. "Tinkering" Can Have Nothing but Bad Effect on Business—Some Evils That Call Loudly for Correction. The incipient agitation which ap pears to have sprung up for immediate tariff revision at. the next session of congress and the biting insinuation that revision promises were largely for the purpose of buncombe are prema ture. It is reasonable to give Mr. Taft a chance, lie did not promise revision at the December session. His platform declared for a revision of the tariff at an extra session of congress, to bo called immediately after March 4. Mr. Taft's sincerity was impugned during the campaign, and in several speeches, notably in one of his chief speeches in Kansas, he set all doubts at rest by declaring that he and his party had pledged tariff revision; that revision undoubtedly would be "down," and that to the best of his ability he would fulfill the pledge to effect forward legislation which should express the deliberate sense of the nation. The deliberate sense of the nation is what is wanted and needed, but re vision in a haphazard and tentative way at the nexi session, at the fag end of the Roosevelt administration, might prove to be nothing more than a very hazardous sort of tariff "tinker ing," which would prove troublesome to business interests and wholly un satisfactory to everybody. It is now recognized by Mr. Taft's party and by every class of political thought that something must be done with the tar iff, and that the task must be under taken and performed in perfect good faith; but free traders, tariff-for-reve nue men, moderate men and high pro tectionists can perhaps all stand on a platform which decides for peace and pause this winter and for a program which avoids haste, waste and hys teria. The exaction of inordinate prices for commodities which affect the railroad activity, and indirectly the purses and prosperity of the whole people; hun dreds of indefensible schedules which bear with hardship upon the consum ers, and the maintenance of artificial high prices in many fields, are evils to bo corrected. Nobody, even on the stump, now seriously contends that the foreigner pays ihe tax, and revi sion has been inevitable from the day that President McKinley declared in his lHtffalo speech: "If, perchance, some of our tariffs are no longer needed for revenue or to encourage and protect our industries at home, why should they not be em ployed to extend and promote our mar kets abroad?" The country will demand and il will have tariff revision, but only a doc trinaire will lose Bight of the fact that the tariff is intimately bound up with the whole fabric of our commerce and industry, and that the relation is so close and complicated that tariff re vision will affect every element of the population, directly or indirectly, and every industry, whelber it he directly related to the tariff or not. "Big stick" and snap judgment methods are not to be desired in dealing with the tariff. The country voted for .ludgb Taft be cause be represents in the public mind as clearly as any man can deliberation, wisdom and common sense. It is right that the administration under his guid ance should have complete control o!' (ho tariff question, not merely because his administration must shoulder the responsibility, but because the country has confidence in his wisdom, modera tion and courage. May all food fortune attend William 11. Taft, the friend of labor, the friend of capital, and therefore the friend of pros I erotiH America. No better man or higher type of citizen ever received at the polls the indorsement of his oouutrynun for their highest service. CAMERON COUNTV PRESS, THURSDAY, DECEMBER 3, 1908. PLEDGED TO ENFORCE LAW. No Possible Misunderstanding of Posi tion Taken by Taft. "The earlier all combinations of wealth understand that under a Re publican administration they will be held strictly accountable to tho law the earlier will business conditions get on a basis that will be a solid founda tion for the building of a new prosper ity."—The President-elect. Mr. Taft takes this early occasion to sound the keynote of his administra tion—the strict enforcement of the law of the land. At the same time he makes plain that the reforms initiated under the present administration will not. only be enforced but perfected and made fully effective, and that progress on the lines laid down under President Roosevelt in ameliorative social legislation will not be stayed. A broader statement of policy as to labor has never been given by a president than by Mr. Taft when he announces his purpose to do everything possible "to put labor on an equality with capi tal and to give labor an equality of op portunity in the negotiations between them." That the next president's powerful influence will also be thrown in favor of national revision of the tariff is also assured. The battle of the schedules will be waged hotly, but much can be done on behalf of the general welfare in this clash of innumerable special Interests if the president is strong and convinced, as Mr. Taft is. Elihu Root for the Senate. The report that Elihu Root, by gen eral agreement of New York Repub licans, may be chosen to succeed Thomas C. Piatt as United States senator is one that pleases all think ing Americans throughout the coun try. Elihu Root is recognized as one of the foremost intellects in American Tiubiic life. As secretary of war he effected a real and beneficial reorgani zation of that department. As secre tary of state he has conducted our foreign relations with dignity and power. It is time that the great state of New York should be worthily repre sented in the senate, as it has not been of late years. Its junior senator has been more ornamental than useful, to say the least. Its senior senator, despite his faithful and commendable services to his party in former years, presents the sorrowful spectacle of an old age without respect. There are other worthy and capable men in the Republican party of New York, but there is none who stands be fore tho country for so much of ability and integrity, and who has such a rec ord of great service well performed, as Elihu Root. He is on his quality and hi» -ecord, without regard to the acci dents of office, easily the foremost citizen of New York. Thinking Republicans and patriotic Americans throughput the nation sin cerely hope that the Republican legis lature of New York will see clearly its opportunity to place that state again in the forefront of the national coun cils on the legislative side as it has been on the administrative. By sending Elihu Root to the sen ate the Republicans of New York will convince the country that they can and do think nationally and in honor ing him will honor their state, their party and themselves. With a man so pre-eminently capable, also available, there ought to be no question about the next senator of the United States from New York. —Chi- cago inter Ocean. "A Man of Stability." The people can be depended upon to stand for their own interests. They have made it manifest that they realized that more was to be secured through the election of a man of sta bility, and possessed of a fair and judicial mind, than there was to b< .'"cured by lite election of a man who shifts bis views with the wind arid who lucks the most vital clemen' requisite* in a sidesman. BRITISH STEAMER DESTROYED 100 PERISH IN BURNING SHIP OFF ISLAND OF MALTA. Disaster in Plain View of Those on Shore, Who Were Almost Pow less to Help. Valetta, Island of Malta. —A ter rible disaster, in which more than 100 persons lost their lives, occurred at the entrance to this port Wednes day within sight of the whole popula tion of the city, who were powerless to give aid. The British steamer Sardinia of the Ellerman lino, hailing from Liverpool and bound for Alexandria, with a crew of 44 Englishmen, 11 first and six second cabin English passen gers and nearly 200 Arab pilgrims aboard, caught fire and within a few minuteß was a roaring fu-nace sur rounded by clouds of black smoke, through which flames burst upward to a height of 200 feet, from frequent ex plosions of naphtha in the hold. So rapidly did the fire spread that the frantic efforts of the crew to oper ate the fire apparatus proved useless, for it seemed but a moment before the upper works and masts crashed down upon the deck, while the ship's boats were crushed by the falling debris or set on fire and quickly burned. Safety lay only in the sea, for no one could save himself except by jumping overboard and taking chances of being picked up. Assistance was hurried to the burning vessel from all the war ships in the harbor and from the shore, but the work of rescue was greatly im peded by the strong tide that was run ning. Even the naval launches, which came as fast as they could be driven, were unable togo alongside. Among the Arabs there was a panic that could not be controlled. Many of them were too terrified to jump and they were burned to death. Others cast them selves into the waves and were drowned. The crew behaved with admirable courage, serving out life preservers to the last, and working the pumps. When the pumps became useless, Capt. Charles Littler, commander of the Sar dinia, took the helm and directed his ship towards the shore so long as it could be navigated. He perished. ITALIAN CAR WAS VICTORIOUS Driven by an American, It Won the International Light Car Race. Savannah, Ga. —An Italian car with an American driver, William H. Hillianl of Boston, on Wednesday won the first international light car race ever held in this country. The record set was 52.56 miles an hour for the 196 miles. Robert Burman, driv ing a Buick car, finished second, more than six minutes behind the winner. The 15 cars starting in the race—l 2 of American, two of Italian and one of French manufacture—were sent away at half minute intervals and kept fn clusters throughout. At times there were as high as four of the little racers in the home stretch in view of the stands. The race was run under sapphire skies and in the warmth of a summer sun. A crowd of many thousands filled the two big grand stands at the finish line and other thousands lined the course. But the crowd remained at a respectful dist ance, for 600 militiamen under martial law were thrown about the racing circuit and they kept the pathway of the cars absolutely free. The only serious wreck came at the very close. Easter had been in trou ble early in the race and was driving along pell-mell on his fourteenth lap when he lost the road and went crashing into a ditch. The mechani cian, Frank Thompson, was hurled from the car and slightly injured. TROOPSGUARDING FACTORIES Six Strikers Are Shot Down by Deputies. Perth Amboy, N. J.—Four com panies of troops of the state mil itia took possession of Keasbey last night and every precaution has been taken to prevent a repetition of the rioting that occurred in that little man ufacturing town Wednesday when six strikers were shot down by deputy sheriffs at the plant of the National Fire Proofing Co. All of the saloons have been closed and the streets are practically deserted except for the presence of the soldiers. Guards have been placed at all of the factories and the soldiers who are not on duty have been quartered in the factories. Perth Amboy, N. J. —The troops guarding the works of the Na tional Fireprooflng Co. at Keasbey, where six men were shot down Wed nesday, opened fire on a party of strikers Thursday night and several men were wounded. The strikers made an unexpected attack on the factory while most of the troops were sleeping inside. The strikers carried no fireams so far as is known, but sticks and stones were hurled. The soldiers on guard in the enclosure sur rounding the building saw men climb ing over the fences and immediately opened fire. Two Harvard Professors Die. Cambridge, Mans.—Prof. John 11. Wright, professor of Greek at Har vard nnd dean of the graduate school, died Wednesday of heart trou ble. He was born in Urumlah, Per sia, February 4, 1852, the son of Be v. Austin H. Wright, a missionary. lie was assistant professor of ancient languages at tho Ohio Agricultural nnd Mechanical college front 1873 to I *76. Prof. George A Bartiett, for n : ny years connected with tlx- Ger man department of Harvard college, Jicd ut his home here Wednesday. FATAL CRASH INJENSE FOG ; VESSEL RAMMED OFF SANDY HOOK AND SINKS, THREE PERSONS PERISHING. SHE CARRIED 85 PASSENGERS Thick Weather Responsible for the Collision—Ship Floated but Ten Minutes After the Accident. New York City.—ln the thick of | a fog off Sandy Hook yesterday the ! stout steel freighter Georgic of the White Star line rammed and sank the i lightly laden Panama line steamer j Finance, outward bound with 85 pas sengers. The Finance went down within ten minutes after the collision, carrying to their death three of her pessengers and one of the crew. The rest of the passengers, who included 19 women and 14 children, as well as others of the crew, were rescued by the boats of the Georgic. The freighter was not damaged. Of the passengers lost one was a woman, Miss Irene Campbell of Pan ama, who clung frantically to the rail of the sinking vessel and could not be persuaded to release her hold, nor were the men who manned the small boats able to forcibly remove her. She was seen clinging determinedly as the vessel was engulfed. William H. Todd, third assistant engineer, jumped overboard and was lost. When a roll of the passengers of the Finance j was called it was found that Charles j H. Schweinler, a policeman of Panama, | and Henry Muller, a railroad conduc | tor of Panama, had disappeared. The disaster occurred in the main ; ship channel off Sandy Hook as both ; vessels were groping their way I through a fog that has held up mari | time commerce in local waters for the j past three days. The Finance was j picking her way down the Swash chan | nel when the whistle of an approach j ing liner was heard. The Finance was l immediately ordered astern and was slowly backing when the Georgic, in bound from Liverpool, loomed out of | the fog and a moment later crashed | into her. LAMPHERE GUILTY OF ARSON Sentenced to from Two to 21 Years In Pen—Will Appeal. Laporte, Ind. —Ray Lamphere, who i was charged with arson and the j murder of Mrs. Belle Gunness and her j three children by setting fire to the ; Gunness house on April 28, was last ; evening found guilty of arson by the I jury which had had the case under | consideration for 24 hours. Within i five minutes after the verdict was re ported, Judge Rlchter sentenced the defendant to the state penitentiary at I Michigan City for an indeterminate | term of from two to 21 years. He will be taken to Michigan City to-day to begin his sentence. Attorney Worden for the defense i said that a motion for a new trial would be made and should it be re fused, an appeal to the Indiana su | preme court would follow. He de- I clared the verdict ridiculous. "If he j was guilty at all," said the attorney, j "he was guilty of murder." Lamphere said that he was confi dent the dead body in the fire was j that of Mrs. Gunness, although his | counsel had tried to prove otherwise. ; He reiterated his innocence of setting ; fire to the house, though admitting i that he was on tho road and saw the fire that night. Murder Case Stirs Paris. Paris, France.—The arrest of Mad ame Steinlieil Thursday following , her confession that for months since the murder of her painter husband and Madame Japy, who were found strangled in the home of the artist on the morning of May 31, her attempt to find the assassins and the innumer able fantastic clues furnished the police and the newspapers were pnly a desperate farce to conceal the real author of the crime, whom she knew, affords Paris the biggest sensation it has had for years. The excitement produced from time to time by the Humbert, Dreyfus and Syveton affairs pales into insignificance by compari son, and the revelations which crowded thick and fast during the day, pointing to the possible exposure of a national scandal, promise to at tract world-wide attention. Wagner Won the 402-Mile Auto Race. Savannah, Ga. —Tho power of six score horses, crashing and roaring in the cylinders of the Italian Fiat car, sent plunging through changing fog and sunshine over 402 miles of oiled roadways by the experienced hands of Louis Wagner, on Thursday won the most spectacular, the longest and the fastest international automobile race ever held in this country. Rear Admiral Russell Dead. Philadelphia, Pa. Hear Admiral Alexander Wilson Russell of the United States navy, retired, died at. i his home here Thursday, aged 84 years. I >«-atli was due to heart failure. Ho first served in the navy on the sloop of war Saratoga. Society Woman Accidentally Shot. Sherman, Tex.— Miss Ixxiise Gates, prominent in society in this city, wa.-> accidentally shot to death Thursday with a tai et rifle in the hands of n t'lrl companion, R. 6. DUil & CO.'S BULLETIN PROGRESS MADE TOWARD NOR MAL COMMERCIAL ACTIVITY. Collections a Little Better—Money Is in Stronger Demand for Com mercial Purposes. New York City.—R. O. Dun & Co.'j Weekly Review of Trade says: Although the holiday and unseason able weather handicapped busbies: this week, further substantial progrc was made toward normal commercial activity, especially in respect to th»- number of orders for spring and later delivery next year. In retail trail.' there is a good deal of irregularity, though the advent of rains and snows, followed by colder weather, helped to improve conditions as the week ad vanced. Southern trade, however, was rather dull throughout, due to warm weather and the low price of cotton and even in parts of the west, as well as tho entire eastern half of the coun try, retail buying might be better. In some lines of trade, especially iron and steel, there is a disposition to regard tariff discussion as a bar to fullest ac tivities. Collections are better, except at the south, and money is in better demand for business purposes. Higher prices for leather, a turn in the tide of shoe shipments, predictions of freer buying of railway materials of iron and steel and higher prices with smaller sales of raw wool are leading events of (he week. Business failures in the United States for the week end ing November 26 number 193 against 258 in the like week of 1907. UNCLE SAM AND JAPS AGREE To Pact Covering the Policy of the Two Countries in the Pacific— The Open Door for China. Washington, D. C. —Despite oflieial reticence, information from reliable sources has been obtained of an agreement of far-reaching importance between the United States and Japan covering the policy of the two coun tries In the Pacific. The agreement is based upon the idea of encouraging and defending free and peaceful commercial development in the Pacific. It. contains only, a mutual guarantee to respect each others' territorial possessions there, but defines the attitude of the two countries towards China, binding each to defend by every peaceful means China's independence and integrity, and to give equal commercial oppor tunity in the Chinese empire to all na tions. But more important still, the agreement, in the event of complica tions threatening the status quo, binds tho United States and Japan to consult each other with a view to acting to gether. The agreement has been drawn up in the form of a declaration and consists of five articles. There is a mutual dis claimer of any aggressive designs, and also a definition of the policy of each government both as directed to the maintenance of the existing status quo in the Pacific, and the defense of the principle of equal opportunity for com merce and industry in China. 100 LOST IN VESSEL'S WRECK Steamer in Philippines Carrying Na tive Laborers Reported Sunk. Manila, P. I. —A coasting steamer carrying laborers from Narvacan to the rice fields in Pangasinan province struck a rock and sank during a storin off the town of San Ferdinando. One hundred of the passengers and crew of the steamer were drowned. The steamer Vizcaya rescued 55. A patrol of constabulary which was established immediately after the ac cident picked up 15 bodies and many were coming ashore. It is not known whether any Americans or Europeans were aboard the wrecked steamer. High Financiers Sentenced. Chicago, 111.—William and Chaun cey L. Graham, officials of the American Steel Rail Co., were sen tenced Friday by Judge Chetlain in the superior court to one to 20 years in the penitentiary on charges of conspiracy. The arrest and conviction of Tilden and Graham was a sequel to the fail ure of the Milwaukee Avenue State bank a few years ago, the two men be ing found guilty of having promoted the Steel Ball Co. by means of ficti tious notes of the bank amounting to nearly $175,000. Tuberculosis Exhibition. New York City.—As the basis for what it is declared will be the greatest campaign against disease ever waged in a city, the international tuberculosis exhibition, at which the work of 15 foreign governments in controlling and stamping out the "great white plague" is to be shown, will be opened at the American Museum of Natural History in this city November 30. Three en tire floors of the museum are devoted to the demonstration of methods and results in dealing with the disease. Lad Suicides. Columbus, O.—William B:iriihou.se, the 18-year-old son of Mrs. Lil lian Barnhouse, was found dying Friday in John Lane's yard. He died soon after. Death was the result of a dose of carbolic acid, apparently taken with suicidal intent. Hitchcock to Be Postmaster General, Hot Springs, Va. —Frank 11. Mitch cock has been offered and lias accepted the position of |KH>i iiiCMier general In the Taft cabinet that i