2 CABERGN COUNTY Pltm H H. MULLIN. Ed.lor. rubliHlied Every Thursday. TERMS OF SUBSCRIPTION. (sryear W j* pud to advance 1 "> ADVERTISING RATES: Advertisements are published at the rate ol (no dollar per square foroiie insertloif and fitly «ats per square for each subsequent insertion Rate* by the year, or for ail or three months, »rt low aud uniform, and will be furnished on Application. r.egnl and Official Advertising per square (jree time* or less. »2; each subsequent, inher its > to cents per squaro. Local notloes lu cents per line tor one Inser serilon; 5 cents per line for each subsequent sen eeuttve Insertion. Obituary notices over fire lines. 10 cents per H«e„ Simple announcements of births, mar* risgen and deaths will be Inserted free. Business cards, five lines or less. *5 per year; ever n*e linos, at the regular rates of adver tising No toc«! Inserted tor less than 75 cents per Usu«. JOB PRINTING Tfce Jefc department of the Prsss Is complete /nd affords facilities for doing the best class ot ) rfc. pAIt'IICULA H ATTENTION PAID TO I„AW riUNTINQ. No paper will be discontinued until arrear ages are paid, except at the optl»n of the pub lisher. Papers sent out of the county must be paid lor in advance. - ■ ■ Ul-'U - » MERITS OF THE CITY. Nearly all civilization is the product of the city, where mind meets mind and each becomes brighter from con tact, says New York Weekly. Masses of population may engender great vices, but they also engender great virtues, and If they do not produce, they certainly develop the finest and keenest intelligences that we have. The little town-states of Greece cre ated most of the ancient civilization that is worth having, and after they fell and the dark ages came in it was the little city-republics of Italy that brought light, learning and mercy back to the world. Some of the blackest crimes are committed in the country. Conan Doyle has Sherlock Holmes, In one of his best stories, point out this fact. It was a clever touch and it is true. The country man is not more honest than the city man, although he may lack opportunities. Flaubert and Balzac have drawn grim pictures of sordid meanness in the rural life of Fiance; Tolstoi has done as much for Kussia, and Sudermann, Ibsen and Hardy have told similar black stories of their own countries. The recent re port of the commission on country life showed considerations which left very much to be desired in the way of im provement. With food products of all kinds ex 'tremely high in price, the people of il-ong Beach, L. 1., may account them selves fortunate In experiencing a visitation of whiting, also known as "frost fish," which were cast upon the beach recently in such numbers that tthe coast for five miles was a solid ridge of fish. Residents along the beach gathered as much as they could >oat immediately and pack away for luture use, and then hauled tons of the 'fish to their gardens and farms to en rich the soil. The whiting is one of the best food fishes of the winter sea son, and the surfeit at Long Beach would have made many a lover of fish happy if it could have been shared "without expense that would have made the distribution profitable. Quartermaster General Aleshire of the United States army declares in his annual report that he could reduce the cost of maintaining the nation's military establishment if he were given more officers and a new system of selection and detail. There is waste in many directions through the ineffi ciency of civilian employes and en listed men who receive extra pay for performing certain duties in an indif ferent way. Great savings could un doubtedly be achieved through the in auguration of system and the appoint ment of capable men, as push for pre- Serment tends to load departments ■with employes who are chiefly con cerned about the drawing of their sal aries. The Washington preacher who finds football in this country worse than bullfighting in Mexico is doubtless sus lained by the statistics of mortality in itie two sports. The difference lies in the fact that while the bullfighting has become tamer, football has taken on a dangerous strenuoslty. Forty thousand shirt waist, makers are on strike in New York. Now, then, M those who have to button 'em down the back will only strike in sympathy, victory is assured. In spite of the professional knock ers the snow really is a beautiful thing, after the walks are swept as far as the street cars. A New York employe has asked that Tils salary be cut down. With this exception his friends had not noticed anything the matter with him. Kermit Roosevelt has killed a sita tunga, but whether it is bigger than an elephant or smaller than a weasel the reader Is left to conjecture. A prominent New York poet is be ing sued for a grocery bill. What business has a poet eating and drink ing, anyway? WANT JUSTICE DONE ATTITUDE OF THE PEOPLE TO WARD THE SUGAR TRUST. Demand Is Not Made In a Spirit of Vengeance But for Its Effect in the Upholding of the Law. At last one of the high officials of tho American Sugar Refining Com pany—the sugar trust—has been in dicted for the monstrous and long continued swindling of which the fed eral government, was the victim. Char les R. Heike, secretary and treasurer of the company, Is important enough and responsible enough to count ma terially in its inner circles. Me Is powerful enough to be dangerous to other men of greater authority, if he can bo induced to tell all that he knows. With Heike Is indicted Harry Walk er, assistant superintendent of the Wil liamsburg docks of the trust, and James P. Bendernagel, former cashier at the same docks, also Ernest W. Oer bracht, former superintendent there, as well as certain subordinantes who have been Indicted before. All of these sugar trust men are charged with con spiracy to defraud the government. No cno who is well informed be lieves that the top of the corrupt line has been reached. It is altogether probable that men still higher in auth ority are more guilty than any so far brought within the sweep of the grand Jury s net, but if they can be reached at all it will be through such measures as these indictments. It may be that if the government can convict the men it has accused they will decline to bear the punishment for their crimes in silence. They may insist upon bringing down other and more notable personages to share their troubles and go with them to the penitentiary, if need be. That -s what the country desires to see, not so much in a spirit ol ven geance as for the sake of checking a dangerously common laxity about dealings with the government, in which the nation, the states and the cities ate defrauded. The whole country wants to see full and impartial Jus tice done, it is eager to witness the wholesome spectacle of trust mag nates punished exactly as persous of no prominence or wealth would be for like frauds upon the nation's treasury and like contempt for its laws. So Soon Forgotten. While Mr. Bryan was celebrating Jackson day by declaiming "The Prince of Peace" at Christobal, in the canal zone (a dispatch from Colon naively says that "he did not mention politics ), the unterrified Democracy of Missouri was gorging on a two dol lar dinner in Kansas City. The Hon. Beauchamp Clark of Pike county emitted ferocious enthusiasm, tho Hon. Joseph Wingate Folk vir tuous commonplaces; our own organ izer of victory, the Hon. Norman Mack, urged the LJemocrats to get to gether. Not a word from Panama; not a word about the chief whom Mr. Mack made president by almost the total electoral vote a fortnight before the election of 190 S. The chairman of the national Democratic committee salut ed the old familiar favorites, Jefferson and Old Hickory; to the Nebraska Jackson and Jefferson he offered no worship, or but a silent one. Has Jackson day ceased to be Rryan day? Is Wandering William lost to memory as to sight?— New York Sun. No Danger of War Over Tariff. Ihe president of the local govern ment board of Great Britain is report ed as deprecating a British tariff on lumber or. the ground that It might lead to war with the United States, and as saying that tariffs had caused nearly all the wars that religion had not. We beg leave to assure Mr. Burns that If there is never a war be tween America and Great Britian un til there is one over a British duty on American lumber, peace will be perpetual—as, indeed, we expect It will be, anyway! As for the other part of his statement, If tariffs are to be eschewed because they occasion nlly provoke wars, of course the nat ural inference is that religion should also be abolished, since It is the other chief cause of wars! But really we, should be much interested to have Mr. Rurns display a catalogue of wars which have been caused by tariffs. The house committee on rivers and harbors has agreed to report in favor of annual appropriations for river im provement hereafter. To keep at work continuously is clearly the best plan to insure real economy as well as positive results. Mr. Tcft and the Consumer. The president sees in this constant ly Increasing burden on the consumer the greatest political factor of the time, and believe that it should be studied and analyzed. Slight Differences Contemporaries that declare we are In disagreement with Mr. Bryan do us an Injustice. Excepting free raw ma terials. prohibition, government own ership of railroads, the initiative and referendum, federal charters for cor poratlonß, government guaranty of bank deposits, federal ownership of telegraph, government payment of campaign expenses and several other things, we are In entire agreement with Mr. Bryan.—Houston (Tex.) Post. CAMERON COUNTY PRESS, THURSDAY, FEBRUARY 17, 1910 HIGH PRICES ARE UNIVERSAL Proof That They Are Universal and Beyond the Reach of Any Government. In free trade England there 1b a crisis in the boot and shoe Industry because of the sharp advance in the cost of leather. Manufacturers draw upon many countries for their raw ma terial, obtaining hides from Argentine, Australia and South Africa as well as North America and Europe, but they find themselves unable to buy leather except at so large an advance that it must force higher prices for shoes — so much higher that consumers pro test bitterly. In Vera Cruz, the best known port of Mexico, the cost of living has about doubled, according to unquestioned au thorities, In the last ten years or so, and the present retail price of food staples such as flour, meats, tea, po tatoes, etc., Is so high that the condi tion of the poor is desperately bad. All that they can hope to do is-to sus tain life by eating only beans and corn meal and the cheapest and poor est vegetables. Even In Siberia, one of the regions least populated and most opulent in natural resources, there is a marked rise In values, all the way from land to meat, and the same change is noted in Argentine, where cattle are raised by millions and the 7,000,000 inhabi tants. more or less, have a territory one-third as large as the United States to spread themselves over and use as prodigally as they desire. Such illustrations of a world-wide movement could be multiplied without limit. They show plainly that some, at least, of the causes of high prices are common to many lands and are probably beyond the reach of any gov ernment. Others, however, may be both local and illegal, and in that case they must be dealt with all the more rigorously because of the burdens which cannot be lifted by the power of the state. For Two New States. There was 110 opposition worthy of notice in the house of representatives when the bill admitting Arizona and New Mexico as separate states was passed. If the senate took the wishes of the people as its guide there would be no resistance in that body to the speedy fulfillment of manifest destiny in the case of these two terri tories—the last remaining in the United States not counting Alaska and the Island possessions of the republic. Doth of the territories are much bet ter qualified for statehood lhan sev eral of the states admitted many years ago. They have enough peo ple, plenty of natural resources and a fair promise of continued and satis factory growth. It is only a question of years, if not months, when both will be members of the great sisterhpod under the Stars and Stripes and there seems to be no good reason for much further delay. President and Party. President Taft is president of all the United States and of all the Re publican party. He is, beyond most men, kindly, long-suffering and pa tient. He will make no martyr of any body. He will penalize no independ ent views on the tariff. He has such himself, lie will not treat as a party crime party independence. He has himself sinned that way and counted it for righteousness. He will ask only, as an honest pres ident must, candor, fair treatment and an honest desire to help the Republi can party to govern and legislate to the good of the whole country. Such men he will support, and he will ex pect their support on the broad, gen eral principles of the Republican plat form, accepting, as he asks for him self. a fair, personal liberty of in terpretation. He will read no man out of the party who does not read himself out. —Philadelphia Press. The President and Trusts. President Taft. broad-minded, judici ally trained, fully equipped and con s'.rvative, has proposed a solution which will disturb no values and affect no investmeent. Pass his measures and the railroad and trust question will rest for a generation. Delay or defeat them, and the gathering tide will rise and sweep over all land marks.—Philadelphia Press. This is one of the times, which is about all the time, when the Demo cratic party will sit on the fence cursing or rldiculinß the earnest men in public life who are trying to do things. While Republicans are work ing at the conservation movement in opposite ways the Democratic party will be faithfully conserving its grouch. Mr. Bryan's inspection of the work on the Panama canal results In his announcing himself a convert to the administration plan for that enter prise. Here is one of the Roosevelt- Taft policies that Bryan does not claim to have been stolen from his stock in trade, but in which he hon orably announces himself a follower. Taft Policies. So much has been said lately about what would come out of the White House if Mr. Roosevelt were still there, it is interesting to note that h*re and there is comment that Mr. Taft is more advanced in his views than Mr. Roosevelt was while in of fice. Mere is something to think about and certain to be thought about. If peopie will talk about policies, hero are things definite and individual enough to be called Taft policies.— Washington Star. Home-Made w\ > 0 i% BY JULIA BOTTOMLEY. EVEN this early in the season the powers that produce our Easter bonnets are working industriously on the millinery which will be in such demand at Easter time, and thereafter. Surrounded by counter parts of all the lovely blossoms we know, and others, born in the brain of the designers, the busy workers enthusiastically assemble braids and ribbons, feathers and flowers into fetching hats. Why should not the tactful home dressmaker try her hand also, at mak ing up a pretty, simple hat or so, for the coming spring? She has more time now than later and can indulge herself in more millinery or lessen the expenses of her spring headwear by a little hatmaking at home. It is fas cinating work. All the home millin er needs is a little guidance. This does not mean that she can make all sorts of hats. The home-dressmaker who turns out a prety lawn dress, weli done in every regard does not at tempt the exacting tailor-made suit. It is the same with hats. A good shape, developed in three different ways is shown in our illus trations. The home milliner may feel perfectly safe in attempting this hat. She needs to buy a wire frame of this or a similar shape, mull and braid to cover it.and the trimming materials. Suppose our enterprising reader lives far enough south to expect warm weather 011 the 2Gth of March, for Easter is very early this year. She may select a fancy braid, flowers and ribbon for her*hat. Roses and lilacs are always in style, as staple as rib bon, which is ever present in millin ery. Probably she owns some good looking roses and will need to freshen them up. This is done by care fully trimming the frayed edges of the petals and tinting them with water colors or with oil colors dissolved in gasoline. Two sprays of lilacs in their natural color and two clusters of roses with their foliage will make a wreath. Two and one-half yards of ribbon will make the full rosette bow, which consists of a group of loops four inches deep, sewed to a small piece of buckram. The frame must first be covered with mull or crinoline, but preferably mull matching the braid in colors. A yard will cover the brim and crown, forming a foundation for the braid. Sew this over the frame as smoothly as possible, covering upper and under brim. Bind the edge of the brim with the braid and then cover the entire hat with it. sewing one row after ] another with the outer edge of each row overlapping the inner edge of the preceeding row. The under brim may i be faced with ribbon like that used in ] the rosette if preferred. As to color, the *methyst shades are a safe choice. Olive, moss or light greens, navy or tight blues, tan, banana and light brow is. in fact there Is almost nothing in colors that will not harmonize with lilacs and roses. The ribbon should be of the same color as the braid, hut need not be just the same shade. Make the flower wreath and sew it to the hat. Then make the rosette, which is sewed on last. Finally the hat is lined with a scrap of silk, and Is ready for wear, j an achievement of v.hich the clever maker has a right to be proud. If she has any misgivings about how to proceed with the making, let her ex amine any hats made of braid, whicn come within her reach. Suppose however, our home-milliner | lives where an Easter falling in March j Is likely to be far Irom an Ideal spring j Tree Planting on Waste Lands. Coke of Holkham, so we learn from Mr. W. H. R. Curtler's short "History of English Agriculture," began his great agricultural work about 177t> on an estate where, as old Lady Townshead said, "all you will see will be one blade of grass, and two rab bits fighting for that;" in fact it was little better than a rabbit warren. Ik transformed the bieak, bare country aide by planting 50 acres of trees every yoar until he had 3,000 acres i noil covered, and in IJS32 had probably , day. Her needs have been looked after, and she should choose braids in darker, stronger colors, than for flower-trimmed hats. A moss green, olive or clear bright navy, or any of the good shades of brown. The blue of the bluebird is the happiest of se lections. For trimming, velvet ribbon, satin bows and fancy feather quills are the proper choice, or wings may be used. Let the satin ribbon be of the same color as the braid. The vel vet ribbon may be a dash of bright color like cherry or coral or a darker snade of the same coior as the satin ribbon. For the feather, nothing is much prettier than the iridescent coque, but there are so many to choose from that one may use the individual taste in this matter. The velvet ribbon is threaded through small slashes cut in ! the covered frame, the fancy feathers I are sewed on firmly and over them a group of loops made of two yards of No. GO ribbon. If the matter of covering the hat with braid seems too i difficult, a shape can be bought ready made and simply trimmed with folded satin ribbon, a cluster of quills and an ornament or flower placed in the cen ter of a rosette made of loops. Five yards of ribbon are needed for this hat and two broad, or a cluster of nar row quills. The ribbon is laid in folds and tucked about the hat in what is known as a "crushed" band. The rosette is a series of loops four inches deep sewed to a little piece of buckram, the size of a silver dollar. This is sewed to the hat after the band and quills have been adjusted. Finally an ornament or a flat flower is sewed at the center of the rosette, completing the trim ming. These hats provide one with some thing pretty for Easter and very use ful for the spring and early summer, or for general wear all summer, for that matter. The last two described are very handsome in all black. Twelve yards of braid are needed at least for this model, one yard of mull, and a spool of silk thread matching the braid in color. Finally, let mo whisper to those interested, the mas culine members of your family will think your achievement wonderfully clever, if you make your own hat. Shank Buttons Best. Just now. when large buttons are so much in vogue 011 shirtwaists .-nd tub gowns, a quick and easy way to attach them so they may be removed for laundering is to use buttons with a shank, and fasten in place with small safety pins on the wrong side. The spaces should be measured and marked with a few stitches just where the buttons should be, so they may be quickly attached after each trip to the laundry. ' In this way one set of buttons will do duty for a number of suits. Practical Traveling Coat. One of the practical coats brought out for southern-bound travelers is the mannish ulster, made of white blan keting, white chinchilla or some simi lar white cloth, which is easily slipped into and out of when jumping into the machine for the ride to the links or homeward. The coat 3 are of full or three-quarter length and have the ad vantage of being cozy, smart and of cleaning perfectly. Delicate mosaic pendants, festooned with a line chain of sterling silver plated with gold, form some of the im ported necklaces. the unique experience of embarking In a ship which was built of oak grown from the acorns he had himself planted. Between 1776 and 1842 (the date of the death) he is said to have spent JCo3ti,9!i2 on improving his es tate. Naturally. Meeker—"Just one year ago to-day I led my wife to the altar. - ' Bleeker —"You did—eh?" Meeker—"Yes; and tfc.tn and there my leadership txded' "-Judy. Quaker Oats is the world's food Eaten in every country; eaten by infants, athletes, young and old. Recognized as the great strength builder. 52 Delicious and economical. WESTERN CANADA What J.f. Hill, the Great Railroad Magnate, Say* About ita Wheat-Producing Powert "The arrontout need of this country [United Ktutes] in another genera **on nr two tho i' r °- viding of honiea for its 1 peoplo and producing I sufficient for them. The I days of our prominence If I las a wheat exporting ■ 111 I country ore gone. C.'an- A I aS I . AMJ wheat country." fVf. I A BOT Hate is taking advantage -■ tPHKlvft'ralhvny hulld log to Hi© wheat field* of Western Canada. /" V~\ Upwards of 125 Million Bushels of Wheat were harvested in 1909. Average of the three provinces of All>erla Bankatchewan and Manitoba will LM | ;W"7v JMM upwards of 23 buHlielH i>er acre. fSPW 1 ree homestead® of 1 (>0 acre*, CVt l^j| |l I! and adjoining pre-cmpllonH of J J IGO ncre* (at $3 per acre, are to 1 12, be hud In the choicest districts. r/yswuZ Ml. ' School® convenient, climate \ Pfl\\ M J I excellent, soli the very bent, I rftf 11 ' I railways close at hand, huild- LJtIJ 1 lug lumber cheap, fuel easy to ■gfef I get and reasonable In price, ID \ water easily procured; mixed farming a succ«>ss. >Vrito as to ■M Bf. l>est place for settlement, settlers' »<£>■ Vum low railway rates, descriptive iJlus ggal trated "Last Best West' (sent free n «, 'A on application), and other infornia- Wl tion, to Hup't of Immigration, . Ottawa, Can., or to the Canadian 7. r Government Agent. H - M * WILLIAMS Bulldino Toledo, Ohio (Use address nearest yon). (4) is not a "food" —it is a medicine, and the only medicine in the world for cows only. Made for the cow and, as itsname indicates, a cow CURE. Barrenness, retained after birth, abortion, scours, caked udder, and all similar affections positively and quickly cured. No one who keeps cows, whether many or few, can afford to be without KOW KURE. It is made especially to keep cows healthy. pur book ''Cow Money" sent FREK. Ask your loeal iloaler for KOW-KUXIE or senil to the manufacturers. DAIRY ASSOCIATION CO. Ljndonville, Vt. The Roof Question is the title of our FREE book, just out, that fully covers this important subject and gives the best of reasons WHY you should cover your roofs with SHELDON'S ROOFING SLATE the ONLY material that has NO EQUAL. Ask us for a bowlc. Ask now. Today. F. C. SHELUON SLATE CO. GRANVILLE. NEW YORK Dr.burkhart 's wonderful Offer 30 SSUgZ^MEGETABLE msOMPauNO* If you are suffering: with any of the following symptoms: pains in side, back, under shoulder blades, sick sour bloated stomach, headache, constipation, catarrh, liver and kidney disease, rheumatism, neuralgia, palpitation "of heart, bad blood,go to to your drugstore ntid pet a 30 days treatment of Or. Burkhart'g Vegetable Com ocund and be cured. Do it Now Tomorrow A. M. too late. Take a CASCARET at bed time; get up in the morning feeling fine and dandy. No need (or sickness from over-eating and drink ing. They surely work while you sleep and help nature help you. Millions take them and keep well. CASCARRTS loe a bo* for a week's treatment, all druggists. Biggest seller in the world. Mi.lion boxes a mouth. FOR SALE First mortgage notes netting good interest, on approved Texas real estate. Also 5,000 acres land, East Texas, $3.50 per acne. 732 acre farm. Brazoria Cquuty, $15.00 per acre. 200 acres, unimproved, near Houston, $25.00 per acre. 40 acre improved farm, '4 mile from Missouri City, Texas, $2,000. Writ® 11s for reliable mation concerning Texas investments. UANKEHB TKUST CO. Houston, Texas. A Lifetime of Good Service NO STROPPING NO HONING PARKERS HAIR BALSAM Oleanwa and beautifies the hair. t "irIMK: Promotes a luxuriant growth. '■,/\> v * syßflfl Never Fails to Restore Gray to ito Youthful Color. yvc.and nt l)n-;g' rf < UATpiIT YOUR I OKAS. They may bring von JT, wealth, t'4'pagc Hook Free. iff. lUKJ. i lUgeraid Jt U , I'ut.Atty t» .Uox K. WanhingtoD.b.C.