2 JGAMERON COUNTY PRESS. H. H. MUM,IN, Kditor and Proprietor Published Every Thursday EMPORIUM. - PENNSYLVANIA Ice water guzzling can be overdone. Summer life is ouo lonj; sweet ice creani. Say, now, aren't these the days you wanted two weeks ago? The air will be free for a year, the courts d&cide. Save your air! Aviation is rapidly becoming the nation's favorite outdoor sport Boiled down, the hot weather ad vice calls for temperance in all things. As a matter of fact, it is generally supposed to be warm at this season of the year. It is the duty of the law to punish the man who is not now merciful to his beast. Whenever invented the hobble skirt must have had an awful grudge egainst womankind. Peoria wants to borrow $.">,000,000. There are others but they haven"t the nerve to mention it. There are some knotty problems that will have to remain unsolved un til the hot wave passes. Going shopping for porch furniture and bathing suits seems worth while even on the hottest day. New York persists in the thought that it is a world's fair in itself. It has ail the sideshows, anyway. Though the aeroplane could not con duct a war all by itself it could give the enemy a severe nervous chill. If the world were your oyster would you open it now or wait until the oys ter season begins next September? King George must be a deliberate ruler, lie hasn't even discharged a fourth-class postmaster since he went into office. Robins are reported to be eating all the cherries in York state. That is probably what the robins think they are there for. Prof. Schiaparelli, who discovered the canals on Mars, is dead without ever having had a chance to explore them in a motor boat. That chauffeur who Inherited S 1,500,- 000 must have felt almost as happy as when he reads his taximeter after an all-day shopping excursion. Expert opinion seems to be that a woman who wears a hobble skirt looks like the sort of a woman who would wear the fool thing. Two prisoners In the jail at Coopers town, N. Y., sawed their way to free dom with a razor blade. That kind of razor blade is common enough. With great tact the Minneapolis committee In charge of the Interna tional convention for the prevention of smoke entertained the delegate* at a banquet instead of a smoker. A New Jersey man convicted and about to die in the electric chair up braided his attorney for "butting in" and saving him from death. The man probably always has lived in New Jer sey, and scarcely could be blamed for being disappointed when escape was In sight. The anti kissing crusade has prog ressed to the point where friends and relatives will be asked not to kiss bride-, and fathers and mothers not to kiss tl.c r babies. I tut the kissing of brides and liable* was done long before .- mltary osculation crusad- • were thought of, and Is apt to survive tie in. If women are to be kept on the farm, farm life must be made l< bur detisotm and more attractive t*> wo men. The conditions which result In farmers' wh figuring flrn on th* list in the stau.-ti of Inanity «r< not calculated to develop rural life at Its best. Improve the motherhood uf any section of the country and the section will Improve P elf. Sooner or later most of them come hep Then lave been many prln' .d« lit In Yale t'niverslH it Is evident that h« hii» iiub i a-' V erh ut ti| New Jersey woman, married on What she thought was h< r deathbed, wan'» a divorce. It ac"tiMi that "tin fimxrul bi»l»«d mean did »oldly fur nish 112 * n't b the wirri ;e tab!- ' build) ti. ' York > ty tu 111.1 Mil itt 111 V .. » I t I*4lll I F MIUHP*' i i . - thl > t i * ks < bt* t*lii !, *1 U !>»• «.* u* , «tsu 4,,*11 i In*! ■ ftu* t* WELCOME THE ISSUE REPUBLICANS EAGER FOR BAT TLE OF BALLOTS. Splendid Record of the Party in Pow er Makes Certain the Verdict That Will Be Returned by the Voters. Champ Clark brought "glad tidings of great joy" to the Tammany braves July 4, predicting with typical Demo cratic fervor of a stuinp spech on In dependence day, that victory would certainly "perch" on the banners of the Democratic party not only in the congressional election this fall, but in the "main event" two years hence. The Democrats have chosen for their slogan in these campaigns "The ad ministration's extravagance, the tariff and the trusts." On either or all of these issues the Republicans have by far the better of it and will "out class, out fight and out-last" the opposition, if the voters have anything approach ing ability to weigh facts and vote ac cordingly. if the Taft administration has ac complished anything at all it has been substantial reductions in the operating expenses of the government. This is a tremendously big country, with lots of people working in it. The nation's "cost of living" is constantly rising, in the very nature of things. .Not even the opposition of the Democrats can keep the country from expanding. It is a billion dollar country and the ap propriations of the session of congress just closed were not abnormally large or greatly in excess of those for re cent sessions. The cry of national ex travagance is not substantiated by the facts. On the tariff issue the Republicans should win as easily as Johnson. The Democracy cannot "come back." It was able to knock out lilaine and Har rison and Cleveland and exhibited something like championship form. But the Democracy cannot stand the ad versity which it always brings, com bined with the prosperity which Re publicanism—real Republicanism, that is to say—always affords. The "glad tidings" based on the hope of winning on the tariff issue will look like some of the predictions of the high brow fight experts just before the late un pleasantness. As to the trusts, if the people want more done to them than has already been done, they would better vote the Debs ticket straight. The Republicans have achieved results. The Democracy has a choice assortment of weird, rabid theories which would, if put into practise, do no particular damage to the trusts beyond what would be in volved in the general demoralization, if not destruction, of the whole indus trial system of the country. At times the Republican policies have verged on the dangerous and in some in stances have actually crossed the line. Hut on the whole the severe but rela tively conservative treatment of the problem has accomplished enough practical good to satisfy the demands of all but the most drastic radicals.- President Taft's Source of Strength. It is said that Mr. Taft has ob tained a large part of the legislation that he wished, and this is due in great part to a quiet insistence on his part rather than to the exhibition of strength or the use of more dictatorial methods than he has pursued. In making this continent upon Mr. Taft's history up to this time in the White House, undoubtedly a fact has been stated, but we shall lose the point of it entirely if we do not go beyond and see what the conclusion is that we are to draw. It is, namely, that the result of Mr. Taft's methods shows what Is gradually dnwnlng upon the world, that the least important force Is that known as physical, whether in Its coarser or more refined forms, and that the clumsy methods of noise mid overbearing display of strength must always yield before an idea, provided that lde-i b«' good. It Is not Mr. Taft's Idea or anybody's idea of right that wins, but It Is the Ideu Itself that wins and carries us forward.—Christian Science Monitor. Credit Belongs to President. When Mr. Taft's administration opened he hald unequivocally that li would be an administration run with due regard t<> the government's In come Uuiost Ills lirst executive sets were roni'i -i d with the establish un lit of a bualliens system In the de partments through which money could be saved to the people by foresight and strict economies. For the first time he approximated the idea of th<- I'rvlhh bm!je t In outlining u common !>. j in lal p< b ter th' di.*T' rent cab* iUet members. Thus H Is to the president as well us in th<* >• cretary of the treasury that the credit for th«« year-end surplus , > \nd .'..if i it «!«•• rl. lit >n top of th«- unpn t edetiti d long list if legislative trluuipis of tin- admlnis »< >lble, but n . ilt* best which has t» eu '•Reeled >II far In the history uf the It «he mucin tie party could get i ■ J* . ■'*! J i wl* at a I, j»r* »M*nt In felt * I ««!» hftit(Vi.) N«wt, CAMERON COUNTY PRESS, THURSDAY, AUGUST 18, 1910. UNFAIR TO AMERICAN WORKER Democratic Policies Would Mean Sub jecting Them to Ruinous Com petition. China is threatening to repeat what has been done in Japan in the way of manufacturing for export. Shanghai has eight large cotton mills in which are employed over 30,000 Chinese at spinning and weaving. In one mill 1,000 persons are employed in day and night shifts, the children earning about four cents a day, and the wages of adults averaging no higher than 20 cents a day. Modern machinery is be ing imported from foreign countries and Chinese operators are said to bo ; quick to learn. The Chinese will soon i make a good deal of their own cotton goods, as, in fact, they do now. The United States has lost a good deal of its Chinese trade as a result of unfair Japanese competition. England is suf fering to a less extent in the same way. The Chinese are sending pig iron to the Pacific coast, and will no doubt, be sending cotton and other products in time if not kept out by ef ficient protection to industries in this country. American workmen cannot compete in point of wages with either Japanese or Chinese. Japanese work men produce large quantities of rugs that are now sold in the United States, the work on which costs in Japan only two or three cents a day. This takes bread out of the mouths of American I workmen, but that is the kind of com | petition the want to sub ject American workmen to by the re duction or removal of tariff duties. The Tariff and High Prices. It continues to be very hard to make the theory tit the facts in the conten tion that the tariff is responsible for high prices and for increased inability of the people to buy commodities. Tha inquiry by the United States senate committee has not gone far, but it has been sufficient to make it very embar rassing for Democrats who have "laid it all to the tariff." Full opportunity has been given to examine witnesses, and yet, says a Washington dispatch, in no single instance has a witness been found who ascribed increased i prices, except in certain luxuries, in i eluding champagne, to the tariff. And j the drift of foreign trade under the new law has been equally confusing to the Democratic argument. The dispatch says:"The imports for the nine months ending with .March show an increase of $235,300,000 over the same period of the preceding year, and yet most of the articles o*i which the ! tariff was lowered show n falling off. j Tea and coffee, both on the free list, I have both fallen off, while cocoa, on which the duty was reduced, has fa.ll i en off $1,000,000 In nine mopths. Lem- I ons. under an increased duty, show an ; increase of $200,000. Silk dress goods, J with a decreased duty, show a de j crease of $1,000,000, and the importa i tion of champagne, on which the duty | was materially increased, has jumped : for the nine months from $3,900,000 to $5,900,000." Inexorable truth is a great demolisher of free trade fustian. Surplus Instead of Deficit. The end of the first fiscal year in which Secretary Franklin MacVeagh ; has been in charge of the United i States treasury shows that there is a ! surplus of $9,402,432 in the year's or | dinary receipts and expenditures. This ! Is a record that was absolutely unex i pected a year ago, when the deficit In the same Items ran to $58,734,955. The average citizen avoids treasury ! statistics as consistently as possible. They have so many strings and cross j strings to them that It often takes a | financial mind to find out what they ! really mean. Thus this $9,402,432 sur plus is not an actual surplus, as the ] expenditures on which it Is based did i not include tin- large sums paid out for the Panama canal. With the*" j payments Included there Is a real deficit of $25,M4,644, but figuring the same way It was $118,795,920 last year. It Is legitimate finance to leave the Panama payments out of th> current expenditure column, be promises Is | redeemed The Linen Industry. i Mi I'ogue, In in address delivered j before the Franklin Institute In I'ltlla delptii.i, called attention to the fact ! that this country burns 8, 000, A0# to 1it.000.000 tons of Hni filter each year after extracting fiai.uoo.iMiu < 112 Unseed j oil iud i .ike The straw that I burned If manufactured into fiber would be »iirth si".iHi,tMMi,noo. Ilerw l» nn opening for a great Industry In this country. Tlx-re Is no linen Industry I to amount to much at the present time ! but In time, If *uttuiently protected, i »uch an Industry *1" created here | that will give employment to thou | wands (it Auteiltnn workmen uinl prti- I dure In this country the lll.eii which I The people ar»* iust now beginning to rtH'Mtall* how wr»»t a man I'renl la. I.i i ..it i. ,»ii> i Mil Biowiim in favor ami strength ll» has both 'be » with I i'l nau •' In « ina>ls » l« thl» muuq WEAK KIDNEYS WEAKEN THE WHOLE BODY. No chain is stronger than its weak est link. No man Is stronger than _ his kidneys. Over -1 work, colds, strains, M* e^c -' weaken the kid 1] neys and tlio whole fjf body suffers. Don't II neglect the slightest U kidney ailment. I3e dfcz \J «§ gin using Doan's \ H" 1 Kidney Pills at once. They aro especially jag® \ ¥P" for sick kidneys. P»jl) I \ Mrs. George La rQ I \ joie, 162 W. Gambia j St., Caro, Mich., says: "I had lost in flesh until I was a mere shadow of my former self and too weak to stand more than a few minutes at a time. My rest was broken and my nervous system shattered. Had Doan's Kid ney Pills not come to my attention, I firmly believe I would be In my grave. They cured me after doctors had failed." Remember the name—Doan's. For sale by all dealers. 50 cents a box. Foster-Milburn Co., Buffalo, N. Y. THE LIMIT. Landlady—Mr. Hall Itoome is about the meanest man I ever met. Mrs. Slowpay—What's the trouble? Landlady—Wants me to reduce the price of his board because he's lost two teeth. SCRATCHED SO SHE COULD NOT SLEEP "I writ© to tell you how thankful I am for the wonderful Cuticura Rem edies. My little niece had eczema for five years and when her mother died I took caro of the child. It was all over her face and body, also on her head. She scratched so that she could not sleep nights. 1 used Cuticura Soap to wash her with and then ap plied Cuticura Ointment. I did not use quite half the Cuticura Soap and Ointment, together with Cuticura Re solvent, when you could see a change and they cured her nicely. Now she Is eleven years old and has never been bothered with eczema since. My friends think it is just great the way the baby was cured by Cuticura. I send you a picture taken when she was about 18 months old. "She was taken with the eczema when two years old. Sho was covered with big sores and her mother had all the best doctors and tried all kinds of Balves and medicines without effect until we used Cuticura Remedies. Mrs. H. Kiernan, 663 Quincy St., Brooklyn, N. Y„ Sept. 27, 1909." Judges' Wigs. The wig is only worn by Kngllsh barristers to give them a steri judi cial appearance, and no one can say that it falls in this respect. The cus tom was originated by a French judge in the seventeenth century when, happening to don a marquis' wig one day, he found it gave him such a stern and dignified appearance that he decided to gut one tor himself and wear It at all times In court. This ho did, and the result was so satisfactory from a legal point of view, that not only judges, but bar risters, also, took up the custom throughout Europe. A Protection Against the Heat. When you begin to think It'B a per sona! matter between you and the sun to see which is the hotter, buy your self a glass or a bottle of Coca Cola. It is cooling —relieves fatigue and quenches the thirst. Wholesome as the purest water and lots nicer to drink At soda fountains and car bonated in bottles—so everywhere. Send 2c stamp lor booklet "The Truth About ('oca-Cola" 2nd the Coca-Cola Itaseball Record Hook for 1910. The latter contains the famous poein "Casey At The Hat," records, schedules for both leagues, and other valuable baseball Information compiled by au thorities. Addresa The Coca-Cola Co, Atlauta, Ga. A Real Argument. They were talking about argument, not In the abstract, but as uppl)ttiK to domestic happiness. "What do >ou think Is the most unanswerable ar gument you e\er heard?" uue bach elor a»ke suffering In this life cornea from too ninth woik,or too little." IU could hive lut off that "too little," and h« would I ivu left It off li. I h» ret rr> d to »' it' not it a that ti <• the i|' a it at bwe hi WANTS HER LETTER PUBLISHED For Benefit of Women who Suffer from Female Ills Minneapolis, Minn.—"l was a great sufferer from female troubles which r ' causetl a weakness and broken down ' condition of the system. I read so BEST, 2TO, muchofwhatLydia w E. Pinkham's Veg ; ti a etable Compound p 1- had done for other \ TV suff ni» women I : felt sure it would help mo, and I must say it did help me \ \ wonderfully. Mv N \ ■ > pains all left me, I rrew stronger, and within three months I was a perfectly well woman. "I want this letter made public to show the benefit women may derive from Lydia E. Pinkham's Vegetable Compound."—Mrs. JoiinO. Moldan; 2115 Second St., North, Minneapolis, Minn. Thousands of unsolicited and genu ine testimonials like the above prove the efficiency of Lydia E. Pinkham's Vegetable Compound, which is made exclusively from roots and herbs. Women who suffer from those dis tressing ills peculiar to their sex should not lose sight of these facts or doubt the ability of Lydia E. Pinkham'a Vegetable Compound to restore their health. If you want special advice write to 31 rs. l*inkliani, at Lynn, Mass* Site will treat yourletteras strictly confidential. For lit) years sha lias been helping pick women in this way, free of charge. Don't hesitate write ut once. SHOULD HAVE BEEN BUSY. OA< Old I^ady—What are you crying about, my little man? Kid —Xothin'. Old Lady—Xothin! Kid—Yes. Me teacher ast me what I was doin' an' I told her nothin', and Bhe said I ought a been doln' sumthin' —an' give me a lickin'. Ves, Indeed. Hostess (at party)— Why, so silent. Miss De Muir? You've scarcely said a word since you came. Youthful Guest —Really, Mrs. lead er, 1 am having a very enjoyable time, but my father has told me 100 times never to say anything unless 1 have something to say, and I suppose— Hostess —But, my dear child, think what a stupid and tiresome thing so ciety would be If everybody followed that advice! Undoubtedly Bad. Mary Mild—Wouldn't you call her • ah, doubtful character? Carrie Cauatiqtie- Not unless you wanted to give her the benefit of the doubt. —Smart Set. Hy a patient loving endurance of annoyance are we preparing our solve:; gradually for the discipline of trials.—r). M. Goulburn. Hungry Little Folks hud delightful satisfaction in a IKJWI of tout haulne Post Toasfies When tlie citilt|r< it want lutii It, tin* wltole*oiuu nour* ii I It. always M-.tdy to ' . v« riglit (rout lite i i k.tge i i , an I .ivi a • ttiy »t« t- . 1 I a, tb»:i. j I.i t the \ auDKli > have !' t I ...Ilea .| t tit #uiu- M TI»e Memory Linfjers'* ) The Place to Ita; Cheap j 5 J. F. PARSONS' 112 fcMlsi KRHEUMATISMi Iluhbigo, soiaticaS iNEURALSIA and ■KIDNEY TROUBLE ■ "IDKOPS" taken Internally, rids tho blood IB of the poisonous matter and adds which BP are the direct causes of these diseases. Wm Applied externally ft affords almost lu (Xfl Rtant relief from pain, wbllea permanent HH cure is boinif effected by purifying tbe ■ blood, dlisolTlnK tbe poisonous sub- Bjl stance and removing It from tbe system. DR. 8. D. BLAND By Of Brenton, Oa., writes: "I had bMQ a suffertr for a number of yeara with Lumbago and Kb<eat physicians, but found nothing that gave tbe relief obtained from IIS ••ft-DROTS." 1 Shall presort be It In mj praotlco Im for rheumatism and Kindred diseases.'* I FREE I It you are suffering' with Rheumatism, ■ Neuralgia. Kidney Trouble or any kin- H dred disease, write to us for a trial bottle Ejj ol "S-DROPS." and test It yourself. JSfi I "■-DROPS" can be used any length of H H time without aoquirlna a "drug huhlt."H l ■aslt Is entirely free of opium, cocaine. H | B alcohol, laudanum, and other similar HI B UtnSln Bottlo, "S.nßOPft"'ftOO Doses) ft BS SI.OO. For Hale by Drvfylit** M BWAN3OH BHEUMATIO OURE GOMPAIY, E fijj Dept. MO. IGO Lake Street, Chicago. JJj THIS ad. is directed at the man who has all the business in his line in this community. •J 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. <3 Make this community buy more. •J 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. CJ That's creative business power. : OURj AD. KATES ARE KIGHT —CALL ON US 'Copyright. IJUU. ti> W.N L'.' Word-of-Mouth Advertising Passing encomiums, only over your store counter, al>out the quality of what you've got to sell, results in about as much satisfaction as yourwifc would get it you y.ive her a box ot cigars ' it Christinas. Advertising in This Paper UU'. to cv»r* Iv it onto an.l makes Ilium talk Uu k with uiuiiay TRUE *| 1