2 CAMERON COUNTY PRESS^ H. M. MULLIN, Editor and Proprietor Published Every Thursday EMPORIUM. • PENNSYLVANIA Did you hear a noise like a fly? There's no age limit on circus boya. The best way not to get typhoid la to prevent it. Have you joined the fly crusade? It floesn't cost anything. We are now supposed to each have 134.50. Why fool with the odd figure? The only safe bet on the weather seems to be that the worst is yet to come. The little brown hen outranks the eagle bird in every essential and de sirable respect. Wellesley girls have been advised to have reasonable intervals between pickles and fudge. As between inconveniencing the Bcorching automobilists and the pub lic let us not hesitate. That fellow who turned burglar be cause a girl jilted htm doubtless was looking for an excuse. Who can blame the June brides for being indignant when flippant scribes refer to them as a "crop." Aeroplane races across the conti nent will rival in spectacularlty the 2:40 trot at the county fair. We denounce race suicide and still permit the homicidal joy rider to roam at large seeking fresh victims. Any automobilist!, who have de clared war on the human race will have to be treated accordingly. About the easiest thing for a mar ried woman to do is to make her hus band believe that he knows besL Paying fines to the government as a penalty for smuggling seems a poor way to wind up a pleasure trip abroad. Can the steeple jack who stole 654 pounds of copper from a church Bteeple be convicted of highway rob bery? Smuggling Is one of those amuse ments which ought to be left to the ridiculously rich who do not mind expense. Do we sufficiently appreciate those aviators who are falling from perilous helght3 that the rest of us may learn to fly? , Thus far, we believe, the life insu rance companies are inclined to re gard aviation as one of the more or less hazardous occupations. In learning how to manage a flying machine the principal drawback Is that you can't rest the machine on anything solid while you are doing It. In addition to the hot water geysers Jn Yellowstone park an Ice cold gey ser has been discovered. The Yel lowstone has nearly all the modern Improvements. If a man Is willing to mortgage his house and lot to buy an automobile he shouldn't kick If he has to mort gage his furniture In order to pay his repair bills. One consoling thought during the hot weather Is that we are all free and untrammcled American citizens aud we will have a bunch of men coming around telling us about It uutll some time In November. The expert swimmers are beginning to get themselves drowned. One good thing about the young man who cau't nwlm ts that bu, never shows off by getting so far from the shore that there Is no chance for htm to return. A college student Is le tdlng a health ful and athletic life on one dollar a week, and the society women of Long Island who are fastlug for the i .ike of health and beauty are gaiulug rosy cheeks aud g> ueral belietif. 'l he New Yoik p'iblli .hoots are to tirlmerK with folk dancing In ih« streets by the children to the music of a hurdy-gurdy. The monkey ought cert.tlnly to bo omitted a* mas ter of cet• monies St the Inauguration of th * aii'liil, u to ",Uu ftd curriculum. It Is lust 91 years since the first atewm ilp cro:t .vd the Atlantic ocean It it, ' from b.mtunah, whl> U v >ib. ml n.,.1 ii wii v „ Yut a Uae» the money and glory. Th« «i ui S- .mi ll l» I iv> w. h lan guor •>.> p» i (uitie. The air «( New York In often h>avy witfe perfume, too. whi.h ». IH iau no is. but oi a aurt to keep | oj.l. ~ ike n lid) sailed a dlili balloon over t'lt> litis iHtrk i.U«« U>-rw Ih ut I!. I . III! ■ Me .til ... , U l In a t> i• n' 112 t* n at b> uti.g tbu KNOWS ITS FRIENDS LABOR JOURNAL ALIVE TO THE REAL SITUATION. Commenting on Passage of Postal Savings Bank Bill, Assertion Made That Democratic Party Can not Be Trusted. Newspaper readers are familiar with the bitter attacks made upon William H. Taft during his campaign for the presidency in the name of practically all of the large labor organizations. Hence the following clipping from the current issue of the Western Laborer of Omaha, the oldest labor paper in the west, is especially interesting. It is displayed in leaded black face type on the first page, covering two col umns, of which the following is the opening: "AT LAST! AT LAST! "With all our heart we congratulate President Taft and the Republican ad ministration on the passage of the pos tal savings bank law. We consider it the most needed and most beneficial legislation of our time. Now the poor est, most humble, most ignorant and superstitious human beings in the country can bank his or her savings and rest assured in the thought that it is safe. That is a blessing. We don't care anything about the squab bling of the banks and politicians over the alleged 'dangerous faults' of this law. The United States, for the first time in its history, has a place for the poorer people to deposit their money where It will be absolutely safe. The people who will deposit their money in the postal banks will never know and never care about the scrap for the funds after it leaves their hands. The Democratic party lined up against this law and it will harm that party immensely. The pos tal savings bank law comes home closer to the big crowd of American citizens, men and women, than any legislation in recent years, and the Democratic party was against it. Shame on the Democratic party. It can explain and explain and be damned. It tried to defeat the postal savings bank law. The Democratic party cannot be trusted nationally." New Party Talk. It is ridiculous to believe that Theo dore Rtfosevelt would lend his support to a new party arising out of the Re publican ranks or of any other politi cal organization, for that matter. He is a Republican first, last and for all time. Although bound by no political affiliations at the present moment. It is unreasonable to assume that the former president would desert the party that was his making, and he is certainly not going to become a part of any organization born of Republi can dissensions. Despite internal trou bles the Republican party Is still In the ascendancy, and were It not, it Is still believed that Col. Roosevelt would ,be more likely to lend it his rejuven ating power than to desert It. New parties-^of late years have not been successful in the United States. The Democratic party has tried twice and with distinct failure both times. Hearst tried It with the more radical wing of Democracy, and in 1890 con servative forcep of the Democrats at tempted to raise a new party on a gold standard platform in order to defeat Ilryan. The foolishness of both en deavors was quickly proven. In all likelihood any new radical political organization made from the rib of Republicanism, as it were, would fall. The new party talk is not seriously ta ken, and to Involve Roosevelt with It is nonsensical.—New Haven Palla dium. Producing Sugar at Home. The lAindon Times prints an article on sugar t» et experiments In Great Pr'taln, showing that sugar beet flour ishes, and that there Is nothing to prevent the itrltlsh people from pro due lug ui! the sugar they consume, excepting the lack of a protective tar iff to sturt the Industry. This Is an • xtrnrt from tlx* article: "It Is surely absurd that this roun try In- Importing all the sugar It coin-mine*, to the value of more than tI'KI.QOO.duO a year, when nearly the whole of this, w » believe, could be produced at home," No better contribution lo the revival of h'ngllsh rut al lit- could be mad* than legUlatli -i to ettrouruge the pro 4 net lon of *ut; ir In that country . If tli frle: (|< of a tariff gain «> much at I! , tc xf election thi-y <»ld at th. I.i t 1 .. urh ad- g> will be brought t»b"' t Hut the Cult'd ttUtea ought to «l«i v. ry i; i h better In the same dl f ll '!<'•'! * Is no good reason *hy Ih country should pay foreign na t • •> • *">.) i.itm to ai;neuUy for raw »ngar when It < mi be jsjjrt as well produced at home. W We Must Tali a the Dos-*. " t wfcl i Utility oi ti mo- CAMERON COUNTY PRESS, THURSDAY, AUGUST 4, 1910. ASKS ONLY FOR FAIR TRIAL Republican Party Perfectly Willing to Goto the Country on Its Tariff Record. Boston Herald thinks that an early start is necessary "if the Repub lican spellbinders expect to convince the people of Massachusetts that the Payne-Aldricb bill is satisfactory and for their interests." Inasmuch as the Democrats propose to make the tariff that center of their attack, it is incum bent on the Republican party to de fend its position, and it is good poli tics for the party to anticipate the Democratic maneuvers. While this tariff bill is by no means perfect, it probably is as good a bill as it is pos sible to produce under political condi tions. Each congressman endeavored to protect fully the industries and products of his district, while the two senators from each state took pains to see that the congressmen did not overlook anything. These efforts were participated in by Democrats as well as Republicans; indeed, Democratic senators and representatives proved themselves to be pretty good protec tionists. If the tariff is the c?use of higher prices on the necessaries, how do the Democrats explain away the fact that the Payne-Aldrich bill actually lowers the duties on most of these neces saries, and in no case increases them, but does derive additional revenue for tin government by increasing the tax on luxuries? This is the cold, hard proposition that the Democrats must have to face, and their only hope lies in being able to fool the voters. The Republican party asks nothing more than a verdict based on the evidence. —Springfield Union. It is possible to condemn the whole tariff system or to condemn this tariff in detail, but the charge that under the pretense of lessening it increased the tariff burden is not sustained by the facts that are now available. — Philadelphia Public Ledger. PROOF OF FALL IN PRICES Bureau of Statistics Shows the Reduc tions That Have Taken Place Recently. The recent fall In prices in the United States is sharply illustrated by the bureau of statistics' figures cover ing domestic and foreign trade for the month of May, 1910, in comparison with earlier -months of the current fis cal year. The bureau publishes each month a statement of the export prices of about fifty principal articles of the export trade, also the wholesale prices of certain important articles in the domestic trade. The export prices are those prevailing in the wholesale markets at the ports of exportation, since the customs regulations state that "all articles exported shall be valued at their actual cost, or the value which they may tduiy bear at the time of exportation in the ports of the United States from which they are exported." The domestic prices quoted by the bureau are the whole sale prices of the articles named at certain great centers, chiefly New York, as supplied to the bureau from recognized and reliable authorities. The May export figures show mate rially lower prices in practical;?' all the important articles forming the ex port trade. In the domestic markets nearly nil articles show lower prices in May and June, 1910, than In the corresponding period of last year. The bureau of -statistics' figures of domestic prices conn- down ton later period than those of export prices. Panama Canal Figures. The figures presented are what art known as the ordinary receipts and expenditures. Tin- Panama canal Is kept separately. Although having the power to issue bonds to provide funds for tin- continuing construction of the canal, the secretary of the treasury In the year gone advanced the funds for the Panama canal work out of thn treasury, and will r« Inibum* the treas ury whenever he thinks the occasion is propitious for a « an .1 bond Issue Tli«< expenditures on account of the e.-inal during the y> tr were about I'M. t *oo,ooo, and If this expenditure \»*r« lm lud- d in the total of th<- year's ex pendlturea, the deficit would be less than s'.• .imhmioO, as compared *lth 11 I K,000,#04) lust year It is Htat< 1 that the advance* tn the (HMCtoffiee department ware only sh, t'<", duo for the fiscal >ear, as compared with tI9.iUI.OM In lh» previous IWal In brief, the |,.M10f11.-e department was within right and a half million dettai* of *ustulnlit« Itself. It wa.« • stimuli >1 at *H<- beginning of the year Wi en. Oh, WhenT fc MITCfIEN ifti rnaliee, through hatinff, Aif.-iinst the world, early and late, No jot of our courage abating. Our part is to work and to watt." —Alice Cary. Early Rising. The early risers are the ones who accomplish things in the world. To be up in the quiet, two hours before the stir and bustle of the day, gives one time to get well started for the day's work. For those who love na ture, this season of the year is the time of all to get out and enjoy the trees and hills if one has them, or the sunrise and clouds, for those are the possession of us all. We cannot all be as ambitious as the early rising Bridget who was up so early that she had all the work done and the beds made before the family were up; but with even a few minutes a day in the quiet of the un interrupted morning when one's mind is fresh and rested from sleep prob lems are easier to work out. It is said of Victor Hugo that his greatest novels were written in just a few minutes each day before break fast. It is amazing the amount of work that may be accomplished in a few moments of concentrated thought. If we wish to do anything very much we will find time to do it. The piece of sewing, the letters that should be written and many things about the house can be done without dis turbing the other members who have not yet risen. There are many things about cook ing and baking that take much time that may be prepared before hand. Pastry is much better to be made and chilled before baking. One may pre pare the flour, butter and lard with the salt, put into the ice chest and take enough for a crust, adding the water; this will keep indefinitely if kept cold. Such step savers take time to get ready, but save time when it is often very pressing. Fruit may be prepared for the day, vegetables got ready, the cold dessert made and many things which may lighten the day's labor and thus make a smooth running, unhur ried home. Putin the hook, sew on that button, hem that frayed skirt before putting the clothes away, then they will be ready to put on. One is apt to put a garment away without attending to the bit of mending and forget it until It Is wanted to wear. Constant vigilance is the price of being always neat and in order, but it is a price worth paying. I AVE EABE, have health. Mi.jL-. And spirits llaht as air. And more than wisdom, more than wealth, A merry heart that iauirhs at care." Reminders for the Housekeeper. Fish may be scalded much easier by first dipping them in boiling wa ter. A tablespoonful of turpentine boiled with the clothes will add greatly to the whitening process. A good agency for keeping the air of th«' cellar sweet and wholesome is white wash made of good lime nnd water. Adding glue to it Is only a damage, us It furnishes an organic matter which putrifies and Is most unpleasant. Charcoal Is recommended as an ab sorber of gases in the milk room or refrigerator. Keep It there continual ly tn a powdered state, renewing oc casionally. especially In hot weather when tin wholesome odors are likely to affect milk and butter. Clear boiling wafer poured through tea stains will remove them. Some Uses for Salt. Sail water la a splendid aurgle fnr •ore throut Suit water snuffed into the nose is u great relief for cold, catarrh and often for a headache Dry aalt or salt water rubbed into thi roots of the hair three times a week will stop tailing hair If the chimney Is burning out on a windy day throw In u handful of salt. Halt sprinkled on cans ts brighten them and k< • p down the dust whin •weeping Hominy Muffins. I PACKAGE MAILED FREE ON REQUEST OF MUNYON'S PAW-PAW PILLS STlio best Stomach and Liver Pills known and a positive and speedy cure for Con stipation, Indigestion, Jaundice, Biliousness, Sour Stomach, Head ache, and all ailments arising from a disor dered stomach or slug gish liver. They con tain in concentrated form all the virtues and values of Mun yon's Paw-Paw Tonic ard are made from the juice of the Paw-Paw fruit. I unhesitatingly recommend these pills as being the best laxative and cathartic ever compounded. Send us a postal or letter requesting a free package of Munyon's Celebrated Paw-Paw Laxa tive Pills, and we will mail same free of charge. MUNYON'S HOMOEO PATHIC HOME REMEDY CO., 53d and Jefferson Sts., Philadelphia. Pa. jtt""" m B™ rS B* Sent * Postal for J Si" s® B* rec l'ackage 1 H 1 a Eta tta of Paxtinc. Better and more economical 9 than liquid antiseptics FOR ALL TOILET USES. Gives one a sweet breath; clean, white, I germ-free teeth—antiseptically clean mouth and throat —purifies the breath after smoking—dispels all disagreeable perspiration and body odors —much ap preciated by dainty women. A quick remedy for sore eyes and catarrh. BA little Pax tine powder dis solved in ■ glass of hot wster makes a delightful antiseptic ao lutioa, possessing extraordinary cleansing, germicidal and heal ing power, and absolutely harm less. Try a Sample. 50c. a large box at druggiits or by mail. THE PAXTON TOILET CO., Boa ton, Mass. Small Job. Him—l was confused for a bit, 1 confess, but it took me only a moment to collect rny wits— Her—Yes, It couldn't take any longer than that. Goon. Not an Objection. "I think he'd like to join your club, but his wife wouldn't hear of it." "She wouldn't hear of it? Why, I know of half a dozen men who would join our club if their wives couldn't hear of it." Back to the Tall Timber. Alfred—Are you going to pass your vacation at the seashore? Gilbert —No, thank you. It's the woods for mine this year. Alfred —Don't like the shore, eh? Gilbert —Oh, 1 like it. well enough, but it's too risky. I passed my vaca tion there last year and had several narrow escapes. Alfred —From drowning? Gilbert —No; summer girls. Seven of them proposed to me. The Stomach Hold. Col. H. N. Kenouf, at the "Old Guard" banquet at Delmonlco's, em phasized the importance to an army of a good commissariat. "You have perhaps heard." he said, "of the company of privates that a patriotic lady entertalued one Me nuirial day to dinner. "It was a good dinner, and at Its end a pretty maid servant entered with a superb dessert. " 'Dessert, sergeant?" she said to the stalwart young soldier at the beau of the table. " 'Desert?' the sergeant answered. 'When 1 con get eats like this for nothln"? Nlxle! Not me!'" HARD TO PLEASE Regarding the Morning Cup. "Oh bow hard It was to part with coffee, but the continued trouble with constipation and belching was such that I finally brought myself to leave It off "Then the question was, what should we use fur the morning drink? Tea was wore* for us ihnu coffee; choco late and cocoa were toon tired of; nulk was not llk< d very well, aud hot «u!i r w« could not endure. "About two years ago we struck Upon PoitUW and have never been without it since. We have sevi u children. Our baby now eighteen month* old would not take milk, so we tried I'oatuiu and |i> tud »he liked It and It agr««4 with b> r p«n • i lk, tfhe Utodu>,and has LM - li. MM of thu healthU at bttbU-a in the alale "I us* about two-thirds Poatuan and in. tii: ■ In.ilk and a t*Ma| ugur, and put It Int'i h. r Untie. It you eauid ttav. imh Is. r eyes fparkle ami heir 'You au Woko * ell!' | i |ily. *1 l.«a»| lb* Huh tofek th.> K> tsd to I I vff • - « hmm RHEUMATISM LUHBkOO, SCIATIC* NEURALGIA and KIDNEY TROUBLE •f-MOPS" taken Internally, rids the blood of tbe palaonous matter and aolds which •re the direct onuses of these diseases. Applied externally it afford* almost In stant relief from pain, while a permanent oure 1* being effected by purifying tbe blood, dissolving tbe poisonous sob staaoe and removing It from tbs system. DR. 8. D. BLAND , Of Brewton, Gs., write*] "1 had b«a • sufferer (or en amber of yew* with Lomtui end Rbsamstlsm Is my arms ead lege, end tried ell the remsdlse that loould getter troth medical works, end aleo consulted with e number of the beet phrsldeei, bat found aothleg «bet gere the relief obtained from "S-FroPS" 1 shell prescribe It In my pnotioe fee rheumatism and kindred diseases. ,112 FREE If yoi are suffering with Rheumatism. Neuralgia, Kidney Trouble or any kln dred disease, writ* to ua for a trial bOMlg of "•-DROPS." ud test it yourself. "•-DROPS" can bo used any length of Ua* without acquiring a "drug habit." as It Is entirely free of opium, oooalne. aloohoi. laudanum, and otter similar Ingredients. Large Stce Settle, -B-DHOPS" (»0* Dieei) BU SI.SO. Fee Sale by Draggle ta. M m»OI IHEDMATie OURE BOMPAIY, M Dept. 80. ltO Laitft liroct, Chleago.^ THIS ad. is directed at the man who has all the business in his line in this community. <3 Mr. Merchant —You say you've got it all. You're sell ing them all they'll buy, any how. But at the same time you would like more business. <1 Make this community buy more. Advertise strongly, consist ently, judiciously. •3 Suppose you can buy a lot of washtubs cheap; advertise a big washtub sale in this pa per. Putin an inviting pic ture of a washtub where people can see it the minute they look at your ad. Talk strong on washtubs. And you'll find every woman in this vicinity who has been getting along with a rickety washtub for years and years will buy a new one from you. €J That's creative business power. OURo AD. KATES ARE RIGHT —CALL ON US ng hi. Ijuu. by W. N I".* Word - of - Mouth Advertising Passing en<" »miunn, only ovt-r your store counter, about the quality of what you've got to ht'il, r< ults in abuit us much i iti !.t im as your wif>-w uUI tit >i>u gave her a box of Advertising in This Paper « Aim the ft; I **" Ad. Gun j /TRUE \ [Bj!