2 CAMERON COUNTY PRESS. H. H. MULLIN, Editor. Published Every Thursday.' TERMS OP SUBSCRIPTION. fer ar MOO Vpalfl ID advance I 1,0 ADVERTISING RATES: Advertisements are published at the rate ot lue dollar per square for one insertion and llfty gents per square for each subsequent insertion. Rates bv the year, or for si* or three months, •re low a:.d uniform, and will be furnished on replication. Legal and Official Advertising per square, three times or less, *2: each subsequent inker ton !0 cents per square. Local notices lu cents per line for one Inser tertlon: 5 cents per line for each subsequent ton'-ecutive 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, $5 per year, over live lines, at the regular rates ot adver tising No local Inserted for less than 75 cents per issus. JOB PRINTING. The Job department of the PRESS Is complete and affords facilities for doing the best class of work. PARTICULAR ATTENTION PAID TO LAW PRINTING. No paper will be discontinued until arrear ages are paid, except at the optluu of the pub- Usher. Papers sent out of the county must be paid lor In advance. Physician's Maladies. A French newspaper publishes some statistics showing the causes of death in the medical profession. The figures are impressive, but there is no, indication as to the source of the information. We read that 44 per cent, die of heart disease, 20 per cent, from nervous affections, 20 per cent, from the morphia habit, and 7 per cent, from tuberculosis. The preva lence of morphia Is ascribed to the fact that a doctor knows when his malady is incurable, and morphia is sought to soothe the mind. For Cleaning Ivory Ornaments. To clean ivory ornaments, first brush them well with a soft luke-warm water and a little soap; then rinse them in water of the same tempera ture, dry with a cloth and a brush till the luster reappears. I'our a little alcohol upon the brush, and should the ivory have become yellow, drying it in a gentle heat is recommended. I have tried this process many times, and have always had the greatest success. —Woman's Home Companion. On the Track. A Burlington passenger train com ing into St. Joseph had to stop and remove a sleeping man from the track. A brakeman was left to bold the man and when the train reached the sta tion a policeman was sent to arrest the track sleeper. He was running down the right of way with the brake man hanging to his coattails with all brakes set.—Kansas City Star. For Nursery Signaling. A whistle is an excellent thing with which to call the children, either for meals or any other purpose. Teach them, no matter where they may be, to come to you as quickly as possible when they hear the whistle blown. By adopting this plan you will save yourself much worry. Horned Snake in South Carolina. James M. Henderson killed a horned at his home, near Bush river, on the Belfast road, on Tuesday. It was about two feet long and lying on a stump in the Held. At the end of its tail was a horn, something like a rooster's spur.— Newberry Observer. Satisfied. "You j-uy Mrs. Ciitington's ex-hus band is content with the divorce?" "Yes," answered Miss Cayenne. "He says the alimony doesn't amount to nearly as much as li<- would have been willing to pay in order to reach the mme understanding t A Narrow Escape. Little Hoy's mother had told him not to cry wh«-n he hurt himself. One day he fell down and bumped his head. lie mastered himself with a struggle, and said, "Mamma, the Juice ver> near came out ot my eyes."—The Delineator, Good Health Hint. l or hard-working persons, especial !y brain workers, an excellent health pr< M-rv< r is the habit of spending a half hour lying prone, In the middle of tin day. I»«>t if combined with iec reution and fresh air. New York Far Surpasses Rome. I < rsons arc likely to think of Koine hi it r Augustus as being a great city, but It was only out fourth of the sise of th« present New York city and its Health not one twentieth as great Wasting the Tea. Why Cidn t you s*k that young (usit up to tea some evening, dear*" *» I I n't b«-it Would do miy K ood. r.itliir H«?'» a ton tinned bmh«- lor " Ittrtroit Vr** The Real Truth. u ti< u it i, iM took* Uuiiguutti tin j < t» *** <*f o\*uiti* iu d<*i $ giltUl a /v WnUf 112 Tin' 9 i <iv*r IHi vo»i t£M#W v li> > <«u nf|. lit/| vii'l i* l * l.uwitn R.ttd • I'"'' ■ «»< Fill** *»t niorni * ofuimi CHASING RAINBOWS. WILL ADORN BENCH HUGHES EMINENTLY FITTED FOR THE SUPREME COURT. At the Same Time It Will Be Regretted j That a Man of His Attainments and Probity Is Removed From Politics. It is a great, surpassingly great, ! tribute to any American to say that j his appointment to a place upon the bench of the highest judicial tribunal in the world strikes his countrymen as in some sense—or degree—a waste of precious stuff, I something less than the fullest and | most vital utilizing of a great force for civic righteousness and na- j tional well being. In view of the enor- I rnous power and influence of the Su-1 preine court it might well be argued that no man could ask a loftier sphere of labor than it gives, and yet Charles Evans Hughes will pass out of the more active, more political, phases of public life into the quiet and dignity of his new sphere of service, leaving his countrymen In doubt whether he ought to be spared, even for so exalted a station. fJovernor Hughes will take to the bench of the court which has always? Impressed European students of Amer ican affairs as being the strongest fea-. ture of the federal government of the | United States, the fullest and highest | confidence of his fellow-citizens. The j country will rejoice to know that so | Just and strong and fearless a man, so ! rare a combination of the clear brain | and the unbending conscience, is to j sit in Judgment on legal questions ! which reach, time and again, to the ! very heart and soul of American na- ' tional life. There will be general and i deep satisfaction with Charles E. ! Hughes as a justice of the Supreme | court, but It will not prevent much re- j gret that he can no longer be reckoned j with as a great force In the active hur- j ly burly of public life. For the governor of New York is an j almost priceless leader on the side of, righteousness. He can 111 be spared from the battlefields of national poli tics. There ought to be two of him— one for tin- court where he has chosen his sphere of service, the other for the hard fighting of politics and the siren- j uotis affairs of state. Hut of the wis- J dom of president Taft's selection there can be no question. He could And no bi-Mri man for the Supreme court Keynote of Republicanism. The new Ideals of civic and govern- 1 mental responsibility which were j given form and Impetus by Theodore Roosevelt have become the keynote of the n< » Itepubllraiisui and are today the crux of the Issue between the ancient Slid piihhltiK order and the ex poneuts of the new This adjustment o> the party to the demands of the living present u the surest proof of Itx vitality and the »ouiidness of its underlying principles and It* übillty to accomplish Its own reformation Is the surest proof of It* tit liens to accomplish the political, ad mlnlstrative and economic icfoiius which I lie country demands Tli* Ik'tiHM rats are talking loudly litem! their "opportunity;" Imt they can b< telicd upon to do the trad! tlouaily wrong thing liufTulo Com inert-int. Pair flKhthiH for opiulcn m-tnl u«n •■su-' either side tor« ltd the other out of the part) What the president wauls Is hamuioy on Keputillt au pledges and « united front against lit a > aiupaigii VV-tftfclntftoii post U MppOi Utlt lU-VerWge tut ft- <t|i r||«|| Wiiium e«p#rt» htlii tote Ih the It • ■ !■ , t» two h.i I , hsi Nf Iter* bun u<wtu tun : CAMERON COUNTY PRESS, THURSDAY, MAY 26, 1910 KNOX'S IDEAS TO TRIUMPH? Today There Seems to Be Strong Probability of the Establishment of International Court. Washington dispatches represent Secretary Knox as most hopeful of the outcome of his proposal for the es tablishment of a permanent Interna tional court of arbitral justice. Re ports regarding the attitude of the powers are understood to be most en couraging, so much so as to justify the expectation that before the next peace conference at The Hague in 1915 the arbitral court will be an ac complished fact. The secretary cites an apt illustra tion of the present state of interna tional society when he compares it to the conditions that existed in Cali fornia after the discovery of gold. Then In the absence of courts every man carried a pistol with which to seek redress for his real or fancied wrongs. That is precisely the condi tion among the powers today, the great war establishments represent ing the pistols of the forty-niners. This chaotic and anarchistic system of individualism on the Pacific slope led to the creation of self-constituted com mittees who enforced the elementary rules of social life in the mining camps until ultimately they came to have the force of law. The proposed arbitral court v.ill, it is expected, cre ate a system of international law by judicial decision in the same way un til the world has a code for interna tional as well as Individual relation ship. Mr. Knox believes that this court will be the first step toward the re moval of the burden of militarism. With the substitution of law for force, of justice for war, there will be a de creasing need for armament until ulti mately it becomes as obsolete as the pistol. l ' of (he forty-niners in the high er civilization of the California of to dny. NO REAL REASON TO WORRY Democratic Success, in the Highest Degree Improbable, Will Not Disturb Business. Kusiness men and Investors who fear the disturbing effect of a new tariff, as the result of Democratic suc cess in coining elections, should real ize that no general change In the tariff is possible within the next two years, at least. The house of representatives which Is to l»- chosen uext Call will not be gin Its legal existence us a working body until December, 1911, unless con vent'd In -liiil session by the presi dent. Certainly It will never be so set in milium sooner than tin' n xular date by Mr Taft, if It should prove to be it fri-i- trade or low tariff body. If (In- hoiiM* should be Democratic ami nf free trade proclivities It coulil liot hop*' to puss a tariff bill before luti- v* inter or sprltix. after the ses sion lii-Kan way In February or Man b I-• I - And then the senate and tin- president would have to be rei-k --ntii'd A-ith The way to u new taiiff making rad ical and general i limiikc* appears to be wry thoroughly bloikod until the spring of 1913. three years from now, at tlie ear lit at It Is burrow lut; Ir. nl.I. Without mm to *oir\ ikwl tin' • (Mi l of pooKiblw DwHMjcratli vie Mirle* lu the near future, upon the tariff system of the I'nited Kiai*» Aduilnlattslliiiis change ami Usui-* hatufe It Is narrow for any furtuer oMrtftl in assume thai hi* way of d<* lug ittins» was tin' only way and that .my »«i'n who departs trout It Is la (be wrong If Cokwel R<».»iilt HAD BEEN TO THE SERVICE Impression on Childish Mind Was What Mother at First Failed to Understand. Robert Saltsman, a prominent citi zen of Erie, Pa., was in town the other day long enough to relate the strange church-going experience of his son Chester. The boy had been In tho habit of going to church with his mother, but one Sunday she was un able togo, and he persuaded her to let him go by himself. Well, when he returned from the seat of Gospel dis pensation his mother was anxious to ascertain how closely he had paid at tention. She asked him what had been the text for the sermon. "Don't worry, you'll get the quilt," replied the boy promptly. The father failed to see the con nection. Once more she inquired about the text, and the boy repeated his remark: "Don't worry, you'll get the quilt." This about convinced the mother that her son was getting a bit too fresh for so small a child, and she made up her mind to punish him. Just then she saw a friend going home from church, and she called after her to learn what the text had been. Here was what it was:"Have no fear, the Comforter will be with you."—Cleveland Plain Dealer. Whole Country Is Stirred. One of the most interesting reports at the recent meeting of the National Association for the Study and Pre vention of Tuberculosis was that of the executive secretary, Dr. Livingston Farrand, showing the growth of the anti-tuberculosis movement since May 1, 1909. The number of associations for the prevention of consumption has increased from 290 to over 425; the number of sanatoria and hospitals for the treatment of tuberculosis is from 298 to 400; and the special tuberculosis dispensaries from 222 to 265. During the year 1909, thirty-six out of forty three legislatures in session con sidered the subject of tuberculosis, and in 28, bills were passed for the prevention or treatment of this dis ease. Since the opening of the legis lative season of 1910, out of ten legis latures in session up to May 1, all have considered the subject of tuber culosis and every one of (hem has enacted some law that bears on this subject. How Carelessl Smith —Why did your pretty cook leave you? Jones —Got mad. Smith —At what? Jones—She caught me kissing my wife.—Cleveland Leader. Personal Knowledge. Teacher —Give me an example of a transparent object. Hoy—A keyhole.—Rire. Mrs* Wlnnlow'a Soothlnp: Syrnp. FnrchlMtvn toothing, softens tho gums. reduces In lUumiaUou,allay.*- pain, euros wind colic. 2Jcaboillo» How one woman doesn't enjoy hear ing another praised. hpi hi Send postal for I* Rc Hp Free Package I 11 Bta nof l'axtine. Better and more economical than liquid antiseptics FOB ALL TOILET USES. Give* one a sweet breath; clean, white, germ-free teeth anti*rptically clean mouth and throat —purifie* «he breath after imoking—diipel* all di*agreeable perspiration and body odor*- much ap preciated by dainty worn ;n. A quick remedy for *ore eye.> and catarrh. A Uttle Paxtine powder tlu §*olvtd ir. e yla t oi hot walei makes a drljyl.tful antiseptic «o lutm, poucuing extraordinary c!un.iny, germicidal and heal in|( potter, and absolutely harm leu Try a Sample. 30c. • larijc bot al drugx 1 * 1 ' or by mall. THCPAJtTO^Toar^O^ioaroMjW*!^ THICK, SWOLLEN GLANDS B . 1 j? tIIMiKIIIM f"\ I. <l.l. W.l', \ I Ifl » I lutkl,, | 11. » 4IM 1.-,1. ». «, !*»«•),. *M Bf',!\LftT" . *' HAIU UAUAW ■? PATENTS "sOEFSI* pa, r " . , •• \:rx |lM|- i t a.,i S The Place to Boj Cheap S ) J. F. PARSONS' / c ICUfiESI Irheumatisml |lumbaqq b sciaticah ■NEURALGIA and! ■KIDNEY TROUBLE! B "J DROPS" taken Internally, rids the blood H H of the poisonous mutter and acids which M H are the direct causes of these diseases. IgN r3 Applied externally It affords almost In- HJ H gtant relief from pain, while a permanent ■ ■ cure Is being effected by purifying the pj B blood, dissolving tbe poisonous sub- H H stance tod removing it from the systom. Bw DR. 9. D. BLAND , 1 Of Brewton, Ga.. writes: U «>x had been a sufferer for a number of years Hfj HI with Lumbago and Kheuniatlura In mi arms KT Drj and legs, and tried alt the remedlen that I could Hkj Ml gathor from rnodl nl worki, and aliio consulted Bjj HL| with a number of the boet phyßlclans, but found K| nothing that k**o tho relief obtained from ■< M| •'fc-DKOPO." I shall prescribe It In my practice E& W tor rheumatism and kindred diseases.'* Ifreei KB if ycu are suffering with Rheumatism, A Bf Neuralgia, Kidney Trouble or any bin- GSj ■ dred disease, write to us for a trial bottle y£ jSJ of "(-DROPS," and tost It yourself. I "fl-OROPS" can be used any length of | B time without acquiring a "drug habit." Ij ■ as It is entirely free of opium, cocaine. < ■ alcohol, laudanum, and other similar !| ■3 Ingredients. ■ Urn nil* Dottle, "O-DnOPS" (SOO Dhm) J! H 91.00. For Bale by DrunUti. B BWANBOS IHEOIMATIB DURE OOMPARY, (1 H Dept. 80* ICO Lake Street* jl YfhaXi 09ffOI* Gives you the reading matter ia m m~X3> SM M emfSGa which you have the greatest tn ■■ 1 ' ■ < - ters.it—the homo news. Its every issue will prove a welcome visitor to every member of the family. It should bead your list of newspaper and periodical subscriptions. G.SCHMIDT'S,^" ——^HEADQUARTERS FOR FHE3H BREAD, QOIMFECTIONERY Daily Delivery. Allorderti given prompt and skillful attention. I —~— 11 Enlarging Your Business ££& If you are in annually, and then carefully business and you note the effect it has in in t|k want to make creasing your volume of busi« rliM Vim, more money you ness; whether a to, ao or 30 will read every per cent increase. If yon 4\ r "~ fflW word we have to watch this gain from year to say. Are yoa you will become intensely ia* fldL fIH spending your terested in your advertising, rjg money for ad- suit! how you can make it en yj vertising in hap- rour business, pf ra hazard fashion If you try this method we X as if intended believe you will not want to for charity, or do you adver- let a single issue of this paper tise for direct results? goto press without something Did you ever stop to think Irom your store, how your advertising can be w '" pleased to have made a source oi profit to T ou ca " on u *» and w *" you, and how its value can be take pleasure ia explain.ng measured in dollars and our annual lon tract (or so cents. If you have not, you many in. he#, and how it tan be are throwing money away. in whatever amount that Advertising is a modera seems tie »t*ty to you. b'.isim »* necessity, but must If y u can sell goods <»ver b>- c< nducted on business the I<m uer we caa al <■ s . w principles. It jrou are not you why this paper wtll best sati .hed with your advertising serve \ tr interests when you y>l liuuld set aside a 1 t-i tain want t teaoh the people of aniuunt of money to t<« spent this community. JOB PRINTING " " v l 4U ij i I il t t* * I « t- #1 , 112 *ii |t<JIV« til* MiHd )IMH * Unim Ui!«f lUu m4«!)¥«ry »iwu;i If you are a business man, did you ever think of the field of opportunity that advertis ing opens to you? There is almost no limit to the possi bilities of your business if you Study how to turn trade into your store. If you are not get ting your share of the business ©f your community there's a reason. People go where they are attracted where they know what they can get and bow much it is sold for. If you make direct statements in your advertising see to it that you are able to fulfill every promise you make. You will add to your business reputa tion and hold your customers. It will not cost as much to run your ad in this paper as you think. It is the persLtent ad vertiser who gets there. Have something in the paper every issue, no matter how small. We will be pleased to quote you our advertising rates, par ticularly on the year's busi ness. >■ —— I IN— MAKE YOUR APPEAL jft to the public through the. columns of this paper. With every issue it carries its message into the homes E and lives of the people. Your competitor has hi* store news in this issue. Why don't you have yours? Don't blame the people for flocking to his store. They know what he has.
Significant historical Pennsylvania newspapers