2 CAMERON COUNT! PRESS. H. H. MULLIN. Editor. Published Every Thursday. TERMS OF SUBSCRIPTION. ffr year KM 11 paid ID advance 1 Ml ADVERTISING HATES: Advertisements are published at the rate of ;ne dollar per square for one insertion and fifty panta per square for each subsequent insertion. Rates by the year, or for six or three mcntha, •re low aud uniform, arid will be furnish*d on application. Letfnl and Official Advertising per square, three times or less. ill: each subsequent inser tion 10 cents per .quare. Local notices in cents per line for one Inscr iption: 5 cents per line for each subsequent •on«ecutivo insertion. Obituary notices over nre lines 10 cents per line. Simple announcements of births, mar riages and deaths will be inserted free. Business cards, five lines or less, s5 per year, over Uve lines, at the regular rales of adver tising. No local inserted for less than 75 cents per issue. JOB PRINTING. The Job department of the PBSSS IS compleu and affords facilities for doing the best class of work. pAICIICULAIt ATTENTION PAIDTO LAW PRINTING. 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. There Is a new reform out in lowa, and It is started by 18 young ladies, prominent in social circles, who have at last discovered the abomination that exists in mere gossip, and so they have organized to suppress it, says Ohio State Journal. They call their organi zation the "Antigossip society." This is a fine effort. It means intellectual and moral uplift. It means that con versation shall deal with real things— with science, philosophy, literature, history, nature and those things that adorn and uplift life. It is not to be thought for an instant that it is the young women alone that need to or ganize for this high purpose. The male section of mankind needs just Buch a reformatory movement. We might say they need it more than the women. It has been necessary, in order to Bave the steamship Minnehaha, which ran ashore on one of the Scilly islands a few days ago, to throw overboard a great many pianolas, which the inhab itants of the island are reported to have eagerly picked up, along with tons of American novels which also had to be flung into the sea. Hut peo ple who get things for nothing are never satisfied. The inhabitants of the Scilly islands are probably grumbling because the ship did not have a cargo of hams and eggs. The tide of immigration is rising, and the officials at New York say April and -May are likely to be record breakers in this respect. More than 5,000 aliens arrived at Ellis Island the other day, and still they come. The circumstances will lead to fresh sug gestions as to the desirability of re stricting immigration. Hut it cannot be denied that the facts point to strong belief abroad in general pros perity here. Immigration falls tiff quickly when commercial and indus trial depression exists. A Chicago magistrate thinks that drunken men should not be arrested, but taken instead by policemen to their homes. Perhaps the next step in this way of doing things will be to give autoists the right to exact damages Irom people they run down, on the ground of the trouble and loss of time which such collisions with pedestrians entail. The arrest of a federal inspector of drugs on a charge of being connected with the infamous cocaine traffic adds another sensation to the Investigation which is being conducted by the phar maceutical board of Philadelphia. The crusade has brought out some startling facts and two tuen have al ready received the maximum peualty for illegal sale of the drug. Chicago's hatpin ordinance Is In force, and one woman has been lined a dollar and costs for using a pin which protruded from her but several inches, and which scratched a man's fart- during Jostling on a crowded street. The long hatpin must go. The Callfornlan who announces that he bus developed an edible rose might now turn his atttrutlon, its other horti culturists have been urged to do, to the production oi a xcentU. onion. Isn't It characteristic of America that a 91,600,000 cafe should fall be- CAUSE the kin hen wa HI far from the tiliilng room that an extra minute wait consumed In bringing orders? Ptomaine poUndlng h*> U ,ide Its BP iwiiiiiiiii iti ice cream In the east It will take more than this to d«-t< r the fcrsve from tuatlng tin fair Possibly It Is fit sin to play xol! on Sunday. < xeept .»r. the thioi y that It Is stntul to wasto time on Hiifuluy or any Other day of the week A r« cent d. <ls ton n» to a sent In a atr< I t ,N KIVI It to ill. man that gets It first rather than tht man who seas It first d«'iiilc in the 'i'.i;rtis at present, ~i,d few an u < m aj>« us lavigi s UNABLE TO REASON COUNTRY LAUGHS AT INCOMPE TENCY OF DEMOCRATS. Judging by Their Leaders, How Is It Possible for the Voters to Have Confidence in the Party of the Minority? Verily it is a hard task to fathom the processes of the Democratic mind. The only safe theory seems to be that if there is a wrong way of going about anything that is the way the Democrat is going to adopt. Witness the performances of Rep resentative Adamson of Georgia. Mr. Adamson, an earnest Democrat, is a member of the house committee on interstate commerce and in such ca pacity he is opposing the president's commerce bill. As near as can be discovered, Mr. Adamson's objections are based chief ly on the ground that the bill is an execution of certain Democratic prin ciples and policies. "The provision as to initiating an inquiry into the rates and practises the president borrowed from the Dem ocratic leaders," asserted Mr. Adam son. He also says:"The president has borrowed from the Democratic platform the suggestion that the com mission may arrest a rate before it goes into effect." Naturally the average citizen, un versed in Democratic ratiocination, will inquire why these facts should embitter a Democrat against the bill. It would seem, rather, that they should inspire him to advocate it and to lend his influence to its early adop tion. For, surely, measures urged by the revered Democratic platform and advocated by the estimable Mr. Bryan must be good for the country, even though an unkind fate has decreed that they should be advanced by a Re publican president. There is a pretty vigorous demand on the part of the people, regardless of party, for the passage of the legis lation mapped out by President Taft. If he has borrowed some of his ideas from the Democratic party, so much the better for the party. It will give Its orators something tangible to talk about on the hustings next fall. But opposition to the measures, predicated on such astonishing grounds as those of Mr. Adamson, will m.ske no friends for him or his party.—Milwaukee Sen tinel. The Villain Still Pursues It. Some weeks ago some lumber deal ers met in a western city and saitl hey regretfully must raise the price of common boards on account of the I'ayne tariff, says the Guthrie tOkla.) State Capital. Think of it! They must raise the price from 50 cents to one dollar a thousand on ac count of the tariff— When the same law reduces the tar iff on common beards 75 cents a thou sand. And these men meet In convention and attempt to deceive and bunko and hoodwink the people. It was the same way in reference to hides. Hides were put on the free list, but all kinds of shoes have gone up on the wholesale market, and not a single re duction is given in "Dun's Review." Then the woolen dealers got togeth er and said they must raise the price of wool on account of the Payne tariff, but there is not in the Payne act one change made in the wool or woolen schedule, except two minor ones, and both of these were reductions. These instances sound like the tricks that were attempted under the McKln ley bill in the same way, and show how men who have pecuniary self-in terests at stake are going to attempt to discredit the Payne tariff law for selfish pecuniary gain.—Xorwalk tO.j Kt Hector. Workingrrten Prosper. A notable development during the month was the voluntary Increase In wages by some o! the leading Indus trial corporations aud railways of the country, affecting close to 1,000,000 employees. Of coincident interest is the rej ort of the American Bankers' association, which estimate, to t.il savings deposits in the world at $15.400,01M1,»HJ0, of v. hleli |J.iiuu,l)ou,ooo are credited to the L'ulted States, the averag deposit per capita being nearly six times greater than In the other countries v.hlch figured in the total. W;ll Return to Right Principles. Just so, when the time tomes foi th< von i ..i th Mit .- eli'i tts dis trict wlilcn eleet* d Mr. Kit- and lor those Ot the.v w York dlbiilei which elided Mr. 11 uveas, to elect Itepr*- sen:ally < lor toe lull term, there tilts art likely to be what they ought 10 be, end not again s.hit the> h ip l»ei,..d to 1 at election 111 ,1 unux piled iii: Albany .loarn.J. It Will £• Dons. There Is n - res son why the Repub licans cannot get together, .nllust ihelr iliff. i mi s, rnd t . all ui i u r » tain i Hiiuid ot the 4o>intr> . As a party, they are mm. »tlhli*t than ihelr ,ul veiisrlas snd teller fitted to carry on 111. govtmutcitl, Mid lor Ih. le r*a .01 the » u| !.• have k. pi tie uln pov. it lor many year*.— I.uw. :| t'ot trior t i i, ■ i Mi I Mtß will pro!, tllly want to l.i.e v. hat rtt ht B.natoc It. .iter hn» 'o iini' a*>body into the la>ntti<>ratlc paiiy without the N-ibrask ,u*a tun CAMERON COUNTY PRESS, THURSDAY, JUNE 9, 1910. ALWAYS PARTY OF LIBERTY Republicans Ever Welcome Open Dis cussion Under the Banner of Their Faith. The Republican party never has been, is not. and never will be, a close corporation. It came into existence with a general Invitation to all good citizens to unite in checking slavery. It has ever since practised the policy of the open door. In its own ranks it accepts and approves wide differ ences of opinion, as long as they are honest, based on principle and resting on a determination to support the broad purposes of the party. This is not the policy of the Demo cratic party and never has been its line of action. Jefferson began and Jackson continued the policy of treat ing the Democratic party as a close corporation. Wherever it is in unchal lenged power it draws the party line sharply and refuses to permit dissent. The unit rule prevails in its national conventions, under which a majority of a single vote in a state delegation controls absolutely every vote from the state. The Republican party in 1876 decided against this practise and in the conventions each man from ev ery state is free to vote as he deems right. Democratic senators at Washington under Democratic training are natu rally challenging independent action in Republican senators. In the Demo cratic party there would be no room for "independents" or insurgents. There is in the Republican party. Honest differences as to details and honest agreeiyent as to essentials is its principle and practise. Every man in the Republican party can vote for the administration or for liis own con science. No one can drive him or boss him. The Republican party is united as to the general policy of President Taft on legislation now before con gress. Every Republican can vote for the administration measures and ev ery Republican is free to make every effort to perfect these measures while they are on passage. This combina tion of criticism within the party and action with the party may be strange to Democratic senators at Washing ton, but it is and always has been good Republican doctrine.—Philadel phia Press. Democratic Blundering. The Democrats are going to main tain their record for blundering if they follow Mr. Champ Clark's lead, given at their Washington "harmony" ban quet the othe- night, of laying the blame for the prevailing high cost of living on the Aldrich-Payne tariff act. The fact is, as shown beyond dispute in the act itself, that the tariff does not touch most, if any, of the articles, particularly those of food, which are higher priced than formerly. In ma king such a charge the Democratic party is simply demonstrating anew its demagogy. It will soon find itself face to face with ,ne stubbornest of all things: viz, an array of facts. These facts will not only establish an alibi for the tariff, but will show that the Aldrlcto-Payne act has produced the most satisfactory conditions the country has ever known in relation to every article with which it deals. Ask the farmers, who constitute the great body of the taxpayers of the nation, and thay will say that they are getting better prices for their products than ever before, and that, while they are paying more for the things they need, the balance of trade is largely in their favor. The manufacturers. Jobbers, wholesale and retail dealers, the me chanics and workingmen. men in every class of Industrial endeavor, will make the same reply. It is an undis puted fact that tlte I'nited States to day Is the most prosperous and best governed country In the world, and the Democrats will simply butt their heads against a stone wall when ihev deny It. Kansas City Journal. Reclamation Returns. The actual lest of the government participation In the work of reclaim ing the waste regions of the west has proved that the experiment Is a suc cess. The settlers who took up land under ihe government built ditches are paying up promptly, a great ma jority of iheiu paying in advance. This can mean but one thing, and that is that the government will receive back the money expended for construction of dams and ditches to provide water for Irrigating the dry lands The peo ple n.ho have settled on these lands are prospering, and the net result of <he project Is the creation of new homes and new source* of supply for n.itli.inl cltl* ti hip and national wealth. \s cm of the pioneer* in the move ment (or government control of Irriga tion project*, the I tee takes pardon able sail? taction in toe nut< 1 tie- of the policy It ha. advocated (or years.— ! Oniabu ilee. Showing Country's Growth. Incr. i*« «l traffic returns on il„ j railroads lend Interest to a r« cent prediction of Mr. .lani«» J i I 111 that there sill be ureal cong ..lion *l»"n! the crops are mated eest autumn, j due not to tin l:t< k of rolling un it 1 but to iiiad>'t|uatu terminal facilities j Ui'llway iull*ago »as said tu hate in I creased JS |« r cent between |i»; mi l ItiOT wlille mi x< me la and fi'elMlit carried hud Itwreu >1 I2H and II |> re: r> ! Iviljl lit e*lui.ited Tbe r« i«>rt of ihe Inter mi* run, n»«rt. i.. »al*»»oi, do nut entirely BROKE HER UP. « given up her club. Mrs. Izit Soe —Why? Mrs. L. I. Terary—Every time she went to a meeting her husband moved the furniture in the parlor all around. A SOLDIER'S EXPERIENCE. Hardships of Army Life Brought On a Severe Case of Kidney Trouble. /f\ H. N. Camp, 1356 Delaware St., Den ver, Colo., says: "Dur ing the Spanish-Amer lean war, I contract* Ml It iSa et * a severe kidney mLi rou^'e - After re turn'nS borne, I was under a physician's care for months, but tSSBH grew gradually worse. jSs|yHgg3 Finally I got so bad RHpi I could not hold the V-ljr' I urine at all. I also ligHgi s,I intense suffer ing from back pains. Doan's Kidney Pills M\made improvement JsSa from the first, and soon I was well and Remember the name—Doan's. For sale by all dealers. 50 cents a Dox. Foster-Milburn Co., Buffalo, N. Y. The Quoter. "You never quote poetry in your speeches?" "No," replied Senator Sorghum; "quoting poetry is too often like send ing an anonymous letter. A man re sorts to it when he wants to say some thing and shift the responsibility of authorship." The Flannel Shirt Joke. There used to be a favorite funny paper story about a man who bought a flannel shirt, and every time it was washed it had to be handed down to one of the children until at last the baby was wearing it. Washing flan nels nsed to be a critical task, but now Easy Task soap is used, and it not only does not shrink the goods, but it leaves the garment soft and comfortable as eider-down. Easy Task soap is puro, white and sanitary. For the Critics. Creston Clark, whose untimely death at Asheville robbed America of a serious and capable actor, was somewhat impatient of criticism. To a Philadelphia critic he once said: "You chaps are unwilling to accept a man for what he is. You want to change him to your own taste. Put each of you has a different taste. To whose inclination, then. Is he to bend ? "No, no! Take the artist for what he Is. That is the right critical atti tude. Don't be like the farm urchin I once saw—an urchin who, as ha stoned a frog to death, repeated se verely: " 'l'll I'arn ye to be n toad.'" Wedding r'ee Counterfeit. A well-dressed stranier entered the oflice «if Justice William B. Williams, Montclair, N. J., and after shaking hands astonished the justice by say ing: "I'm here to redeem that coun terfeit $lO bill I passed on you. Two years ago I called on you with my girl and two witnesses and you mar ried us. 1 handed you a $lO bill. I ad a counterfeit In my pocketbook thai I'd carried for several years. I never missed It until yesterday. Then I remembered that I'd accidentally handed you the bill." The caller pro duced a good $lO bill, but the justice r» fused to take It. "Don't let that worry you, my dear fellow," he laughed. "I never knew it was a counterfeit. No kind of money sticks to me over night. I'm married, my self 112 A Breakfast I Joy— Sweet, Crisp, Golden-Brown Post T oasties Kr ilv to sitrvf from tli« i u v.i.'.c with t reuni —no i « nvcetiaary. "The Memory Lingers'* l*k|« lo< sad Ik S The Place ti Bay Cheap S ; J. F. PARSONS' ? iclifiisl RHEUMATISM! LUHBAQO, SGIATICAI NEURALGIA and! KIDNEY TROUBLE! "i DROPS" taken Internally, rids tbe blood H ot the poisonous matter and acids which DB are the direct causes of these diseases. H Applied externally It affords almost In- ■ stant relief from pain, while a permanent H cure la being effected by purifying the K9 blood. dissolTlng the pouonous sab- H stance and removing It from tba system. ■ DR. 9. D. BLAND S Of Brewton, Ga., -writes: ••I bad been a aufforcr for a ntimber of years Vl with Lumbago and Khouioatlpm In ray arma Bj aud lege, and tried all tbe remedies that I oould Hi gather from medical worka, and alao consulted B] with a number of tbo best phvalclans, but round H nothing that gave the relief obtained from ■] "6 DROPS." I ahall prescribe it In my practloe HI tor rheumatism and kindred dlaeaaoa.'' FREES If you are suffering with Rheumatism, Hj Neuralgia. Kidney Troublo or any kin- ■ dred disease, write to us ror a trial bottle H of "t-DROPS." and test it yourself. ■ "B-DROPS" can be used any length of ■] time without acquiring a "drug bablt,"H as It Is entirely free or opium, cocaine. ■ alcohol, laudanum, and other similar K| Ingredients. LargaStza Bottle, "6-DHOPS" (SOB Dmoi) ■] •1.00. For Bala by DnnliU. BWAMOB BHEORATIB OORE COMPABY, ff Dap*. SO. 140 Lab* Strait, W Y&itr* l/jimo Osiriaf* Gives >' on th ® readin e ma,,er itt t tf.7a? SWHJBWMWS a which you have the greater in " terest —the home news. Its every issue will prove a welcome visitor to every member of the family- ll should head your list of newspaper and periodical subscriptions. G.SCHMIDT'S, 1 -^ —— HEADQUARTERS POR FRESH BREAD, a|| POD til elf FANCY CAKES, §5)31 Vj I ,ce crsai, I * CONFECTIONERY Daily Delivery. Allordere given prompt end ■ killful attention. Enlarging Your Business If you are in business and you vSli want to make money you Jft'jl will read every word we have to IjW kS speudinn your Hf Wl money (or ad* ys hazard fashion riT ®H> as if intended for chanty, or do you adver tise for direct results? Did you ever stop to think how y ui advertising can be made a source of profit to you, and how its value ian lie measured in dollars and cint>. If v>w have not, you are throwing money away. Advertising it a modera I'isin« »-• a«ces«ity, but must U> conducted ou bumest principles. If yuu are not sat .< I with your advertising you •>! uld set aside a tcitaia ato -it of niwiiey to tie spent JOB PRINTING l tt!« • *|«»r ill n» ihs uil »r \s iaviuti* ». l«H*r i.iil it. >.i». •< » I u«iii • .i], ti ,; r «i «t , Ail it, iva >. M «> ii ul J- "I 4 l>Ut« InllM Ihdl) k > ilia hitMi Mji, Jelitaiy t,W4)i If yon 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 ycrr share of the business of your community there's a reason. People go where they are attracted where they know what they can get and how 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 wifl 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 persistent 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. MAKE YOUR APPEAL fto the public through the columns of this paper. With every issue it carries its message into the homes and lives of the people. Your competitor has his store news in this issue. Why don't you have yours? Don't blame the people for flocking to his store. Thev know what he has. annually, and then carefully note the effect it has in in creasinu your volume of busi ness; whether a to, ao or 30 per cent increase. If you watch this gain from year to you will become intensely in terested in your advertising, and how you can make it en largo your business. If you try this method wo believe vou will not want to let a - issue of thib paper without something from your store. We \. >ll he pleased to havo you tall on us, and we will take pleasure >a Mplar.iing our annual contract for so nuny iti hi , and how it r AH be used in v, '. ver uraount that seeuta IK uy to you. If y u can sell goods over the 1 o cau al%> s' uw you w - tins paper will best serve v ■ 1 iiitiicsts when yon want t if.n b iho peup i of this twin nunity.
Significant historical Pennsylvania newspapers