Established, iHto. Cf ieroa Co :• i' ii"l Manager j Ji;.vMGM) Kli-ies, .» - i.n.t ut , W Scott Assistant Local Editor. PWBiJ.SHED KVKKY THURSDAY . •■■•V T* n ■■linn '■ REPUBLICAN TICKET. For Governor. JOHN* K. TENUtt, Charleroi. Washington county. For Lieutenant Governor, C< N'ORESSM \N JOHN M. REYNOLDS, ! Beilforil county. For Secretary of Internal Affairs, HENRY HOUCK. Lebanon County. For State Treasurer, C. FRED WRIGHT, Susquehanna county. For Congress, CHAS. E. PATTON, Olwfletd County. For State Senator, JAMES K. P. HALL, Elk County. For Representative iti General Assembly, j JOSIAB HOWARD, Emporium. Canting Hypocrisy. The spectacle oi canting hypocricy, ; false pretense of advocacy of reform J and wild dt mag< . • ipi eal to the mob | which is at the pre-ten t ti.iic being pre- I Ber. f ed by the • imp ii«" of William 11. Berry, the candidal for Governor of the Flinn Van Vd!-wib :rg-Oang-Brv- ! t. ue Party, i< • . • i to wet the honest and silicons voter i » I thinking, ■ cs the Phi a- •• ut him- . self aud his support* under BUS- j pieion and should bojaiied. Then o-j or«l hows howHVc , ! t ivl «'l be win State Treasurer and custodian ot the ] State's nv> *y he had pet depositories for .S ate funds. One of these was the j Harrisburg Trust Co. The Han i.-burg Trust *. financed a j $50,000 bond issue of ttie Fields Brick j Co, of Chester, Pa., of which Berry was tlie principal owner. This u uid j after the principal bank in Chester had loaned the Fields Brick Co. $1(5,000 a.iJ j had refused to advance any more. It has been asserted, too, and wo have hot seen it denied, that the Har risburg Trust 00., which furnished the $500,000 bond required of Berry by the State when he became State Treasur er. did so virtually free of charge. When Berry took office as State Treasurer, tin -imo . ' < 112 ; ; tate funds on deposit in the ll«riisburg 'I rust Co., on April 30, 1906, was 9385,000. Month by month thereafter th>' S'ate Funds deposited in the Harrisburg Trust Co. increased, until, on S 1906. they were §718,126, at about which ligure they remained during th« ' tire term of Berry's tenure uh State Treasurer, being reduced when fiissuccessor took office. Another pet depository of State funds under the Berry regime was the Farmers' Deposit Bank ot Pittsburg When Berry borrowed sls,i>oo unpaid interest. Berry's ingratitude to (lutl'ey, his hy pocrisy in posing as lighting the liquor interests when he had made sue!) ar rangements that at the Allentown Democratic Convention live saloon del-gates and one collector for a brew ery swung the entire Lackawanna county delegation lor Berry, and the li- 1 >f those who supported iierry there reveals the uam>«s of others connected wit the iqtior iiiterirats. His demagogic appeals to the mob, his dec idi that the men bo burned at th stake, and others who opposed him .t Alleutow n jatlc.l is well as his and iguitied and iroihy .eimatioual ut terances i i the stump, are of too re sent occurrence to comment. Acknowledge It. Emporium People Ma* to How to the Inevitable Scores of Citizens Prove it, Mrs John Smuinersun \V. Sixth St., Km; riuiu. Pa. say- My back ached most >l ihe 11 tie* ami I here wai a -ore Si »s across my kidneys. Hhcmuatic pain* darted through my buib* aud in the limroillg when I gut Up I fell tired and laaguil llcunn.' that !>..tn re|Niraitou fur coaiplaiiit* of this kind I procured a -up Lily at Taggart '» Drug Store. The rem dies I hud Jirevi ady ukatt had nol Ik 11 ''i ttle, hut |k.ah a Kidney Pills brought relief at une«- I new t. «-l much atroager ami hatter in every way ' The ftboVe «laleUl> 111 »4l »iv» ti in • tlX»? and on l»eo. 11, lIUli Mrs Sum tie (*t>n luttttrmed it in detail. K*r iale hy all d. .' r Pr 'ill • i,'- y «i r Mtlburn Co., ItuHuln .New Yurk, sole agent*. Iteue'Utl *r Ihe name > 11 .ati a—and take te> uthi r Prices tte. t-%o; so and Tie. Oliry tor S«lv II W. Oraham haa hotuw-nrowu cadery fur aale, at hi* r«*udeuc«, Hfth alriwt iV'Jt SMALL COUNTY !S V?ri I Df n PP«FN r f ED AT CAPITAL. Josiah Howard Legislator Since 1905, Will Be He-Elected in Ca meron. Pit:*>>ury 1 laxette-Timea. Came*on the emallest county iu pop | ulation in Pennsylvania, is represent ed by one of the abb at men in the i Legislature. Josiah Howard, of Em ' porimn. entered the House in 1905 and ' it the session of 1907 he was given the 1 important chairmanship of the com mittee ol ways and means. In 1909 he was the head of the education commit tee, the body which bad charge of the | school code. In the primaries of this spring no representative Republican of Cameron | county was willing to enter the field against Mr. Howard. It was generally agreed that he had so ably represented hi constituents in the two sessions j that he should not be opposed He have great influence m the next House- Mr. Howard is a man of big business i affairs aud knows not only the needs : of his constituents, but is well inform j ed concerning his state. .Mr. Howard was born in Williams , port on January 3, 1961. He was edu cated in the public schools, graduating !in 1880. In 1887, he removed to Em | porium and entered the lumber bitsi ness as a member of C. IJ. Howard I Company, a corporation which has , large interests in Cameron county. Mr. Howard is also interested in the ! big powder mills of Cameron county, having recently been selected as chair man of executive board of the powder I company. His concern has a contract I to supply all of the dynamite used iu I the construction of the Panama canal. ! Mr. Howard was elected burgess of ! Emporium in 1902 and first entered the ! House in 1905. What Democrats Think of Teller's Assailant. From the Doylestown Democrat. The North American is now so I thoroughly discredited that no well I informed person isdeceived by its cen \ sure. Its yellow capers are the laugh ing stock of newspaper readers within j the limited area in which it circulates. [ It is a joke, and a very small oue too. ! People once laughed with the North : American; but now they laugh at it. : It has long been on the toboggan slide i of popularity aud its stronger and l.'et ter newspaper rivals in the city have erowuod it lUlo a very &ui>ud standing. L 4 news is i colored to suit its own distorted and j abnormal views of soci< ty and poii | tics Writers in its employ must sin!: i their individuality, character and hoi - or as newspaper men and drag then - ! selves without protest through its yel low mire or get out, and ever_\ sell respecting newspaper man gets out. A man who stays two months on ils stall' ; of writers is considered an old man hi jHa employ. Usually about two weeks !ofit is enough. The public will draw 1 their own conclusion about the v.due of political views emanating from that ' *ort of a news pa | er hades. Glorying in character assassination, ■ it is impotent to assassinate, because iis vocation .is an ass;-~s;n is too well advertised. Politically it is a nonet.- ! tity. It has no policy and little influ ence If it represents anybody politi j eally, ii is a set ot discredited and ois lodged Republican leaders, who have long wanted to control Pennsylvania ; politics, but cannot. Soured by its own political feebleness and chafing under defeat ot whoever or whatever it has ever advocated, its aim is now 1 i i create political anarchy. Again it will fail because its mission as a di 1 ' tnrber is too well known. The North ! American has never bad a word of commendation for a Democrat or a Democratic policy. In this respect the Democratic party is fortunate, for a I party's policy or candidate* con Id re ! eelve no belter endorsement than the North American's active opposition. Tener and the Wage Earner. In a recent address to a gathering of 1 miners Representative Tener discussed the attitude of the Republican Party in this Stal towards labor, lie referred to the many wholesome laws for the adv iiicctiiurt of the wage earner enae t< Ihy a' par'y and continued: ' Of l his record we are Justly promt, anil we po,nt to our action In the past v« u gu ii uniee of our inlentions in the luture. We realise that the develop ment ol our InduHtrieM has brought with it new problems, new tlunger* and allogeiher complex condition* that demand and deaerve eonnldera tion and treatment i'V tiie law making aud law .n of the life aud health of ttiua« wle • 1 t the wage uamer. It will b« Ut the Intereni of avery working man In Peuuaylvaula to vule , the Itepubbnan ticket thta year. A Uit , irr friend of Ul«ir than John k Tauer has never Hans pnsieuted to the |sm> CAMERON COUNTY PRESS, THURSDAY, OCTOBER 27, 1910. T_.ll 112 I H 112 «*. £% t Up t ifi mmtfi* ft* r*SiWWfIR rmintlf Mi g> i hbr rt Si h <*; m "1 1 «| ili H1 V £ls IIIU witßal %$ w a u. ti fi g■■>i y£ I I#J Uj£ 55? dr I am a candidate for the Legislature and respect fully solicit your votes for me at the coming election, Tuesday, Nov. 8, 1910. I have always stood for Schools and Churches, Play Grounds and Factories, Ferms and Homes. I have lived here 23 years and you all know me and that I have used my best efforts for the perman e nt advancement ofthe interests of the whole county. Our towns and county are growing and we are getting better schools, better churches and more factories. We are on the FRONT LINE in many things and I will try to do my share to keep us there, and to progress as fast as opportunity and means permit us. We firmly believe the county is only beginning to open up its coal operations and brick clays and that they hold a large and sure future for us all. Trusting to merit your support and assuring you of my appreciation and best endeavor. Yours very truly, JO3IAH HOWARD, Emporium, Pa., Oct. 17, 1910. pie &B a candidate for (Jovernor. His record as a citizen and as n public man in every sense confirms thisf aloment. The pledge lie m the wage earn ers to support their cause to the mea sure of his ability and influence was not a campaign platitude, lie meant every word he uttered. With John K. Tener as Governor labor will be asuur ed of a "square deal" at Harrisburg The election of .>lr. Tener and the other candidates on the State lickot is not the only phase of the campaign with which labor is concerned. On N >vemb:*r Bth this State will electa Legislature and thirty-two members of Congress. The Legislature will name a I'liited Suites Senator. That Sena tor should be a Republican. Each ol' the thirty-two men Pennsylvania will send to the Mouse at Washington should be a Republican. The welfare of labor demands this. If the Demo cratic party comes into power it will pass a Democratic tariff bill. Rvery wage earner knows what that will liu au because he recalls what the eunc meut of the last Democratic tariff bill meant. There is but one way for the laboring man to protect himself against (I Jtructivo Democratic tariff reviaion. lie must vote tl>c Republican ticket. A vote lor the K>*ystouo ticket will be a vote ira liryan Democrat for Gov ernor. It will he a vote for Democrat ic candidates for the Legi l it lire, who, if elected, will vote for a Democrat for United S'atm Senator. It will be a vote for l» " atlc candidates for Congress, wli , if i leeti if, will vote to substitute free triile for the protective tariff'system. Can any working man in this State afford to vote the Key stone ticket? Auto Party. Last Thursday, Mrs. Henry Taylor, of Warren, accompanied hy her niece Mism Mary lliukle, of Wilcox, and Mr. Charles Km men, of Warren, autoed to Kinpurluin and were guests at the home of Mrs. Lixxie liinkle. The par ty were en route for liellefotite from Warren. Clarion Students tie-Union. This iThursday l evening, tlie for ■ tier students and graduates ol Clarion State Normal School, who are teach ing in Cameron county, will hold a re union and bwqiwt. Prof (lenrge J. ilecht, principal of the school, who Is prereut at the County Institute ami Mm M«ttin M Collins County Hii|»i inteudeiit of Hchoois, will l» prntent at the bsni|Ust Snger A Company lire tile ■ ulercia of the evening mid the bam|iiet will l»< served in their popu lar parlors This will uo doubt prove to lie a happy invasion. Good Piano tor Hals, A Hradbury l'Uu> > •<|tiar>t) lu good >o edition \pply at Ph»>» ufWce, *7 If. The Popular Windsor. The many Cameron county patrons of the Windsor Hotel, Philadelphia, will be pleased to learn that this long, c (abl'shed and popular hotel, which has been conducted for so many years by the Windsor Ileal Estate Company, has been leased for a period of ten years by Waldo T. Brubaker, who for the past live years has managed the hotel for the owners. Before coming to the Wind sor, Mr. Brubaker was for aome years connected with the Shel burne, of Atlantic city. Air. Brubaker has applied for a char ter for the Philadelphia Windsor Mo tel Company, which will assume the lease and conduct the business. Asso ciated with him iu tlie new concern and active in the conduct of the busi ness will be Frank J. Zimmerman, for the past eighteen years iu charge of Basset I Ice Cream ( oinpauy's restaur ant at . r >U4. Market S'reet; John It. Keegan, formerly manager at the Ru dolf. Atlantic City, and *at 'present Chiet clerk at the Windsor; Clarence W. Walsh and Joseph F. Donovan. The last two named are with Mr. Bru baker the ine >rporatorj of thej new company. While one of the greatest assets of the Windsor is undoubtedly its loca tion, situated as it is on Filbert Stria t, midway between Broad Street Station and the Reading Terminal and in the heart of the Theatre and shopping dis tricts, thu new company plans to add to the attractiveness of thb house by several changes and improvements, among which ire the addition of about fifty new suites with private baths, and the placing of the dining rooms and kitchens under the personal super vision and direction of Mr. Frank J /.immernian, one of the best known and most competent stewards iu Phila delphia. Mr. Zimmerman plans sever al extensive changes in the dining I'IKIUI, and intends to make a specialty ol serving a business men's lunch at noon time The house will Is. conduct < 11, as formerly, on both the American and Kuropean Plans, W.tNTKIi ATom t. Hampton's Maga nine wants a reliable man or woman in I'mporlum to sell the fastest Krowiut? magaxine in America Karn fi..'m to !■> no a day Write Immediately for "Salary Plan' and FKKK outfit Ad ilresa "Vn.N," Hales Mgr., Ilamplou's Magazine, s.'t West :tftth Street, New \'.rk IMt A fU IK »••!» »|» gl VMM 1 1«%| t«|t> r«l I MtH'irn *•'/ till ««uu 'I Juki Ht ft tt' . •io uf i'mnrrKU i Kn« «, luiwal hs*. this l*i Immtu gr«M»*t U» Of lift Mtfaaii'., of I iltitoa etiiittly >», tu vbitin All !'«»•«.«• I litlirt*! lu tftnl «•(%(« mim U> mmkm *u4 it»t '•tf t l*lu»« • < «l' hulull wilt lu> mi lb* •#**<« mlhuul uHUh Hri'f.riif Uilia * *•*» 4lU»fuiyi I Hihpunnu, I * ui, n is»m if it the i Slings in MiSSinor^ Can Always be Found Here. / •. ;^ X< /■ "'• ' / 112 / ' . v, lv> > \ Ij .■'V. ;;v.V4 % , i, V, / \ ;'v^ /• p»- -■' • \ :• i / . > . \ U \iV •- \ lJ' - J }! ) % \ l 5 •112 A New Shipment of BLACK BEAVER HATS received this week. We have all the new- We are the only est things in Hair Goods merchants who carry now. Good Human Hair the La France Corset. Switches, $1.50 to 8.00. Ask to see it. LUDLAMS. The Churches. TOMMANIIKF, CJILLW I RKV. R>7 L. TATE, R< otor The lo'lowlrtj., services will I n field at Emmanuel Chuieh on next Sun i day: There will be »n early Celebration of i the Htly Communion, at 7:30 o'clock. Morning Prayer beains 10:30, the theme of tbe sermon will be "The Mis ! sion of the Church." Tbe Bible School will met in the ' Parish House at 12 o'clock. Evening Prayer will be bt Id at 7:30 1 o'clock. Tbe subject of th- sermon ■ will be. "A Great Refusal.'' On Tuesday which is All Stints Day, ! there will be a Celebration of the Holy Communion at 10 o'clock. A 1 Saints Day is a day of holy obligation, so all i the members of the Parish who can I possibly do i'o, are invited to Com | munioateon th.it day. Tbe offerings on next Sunday, Oct, i 30th will bo for Missions. | Strangers are always welcome at l Emmanuel Church. The Commencement Bulletin of The Pennsylvania State Coliegejast receiv ed contains some notable addresses. One in by Dr. S. F. Weber, of Louis iana, on"The Function of the Ameri can High School" and another on | "Know Your Position 1 ' by John H. | Jones, of Pittsburg The President's statement shows the remarkable growth | of this institution in tbe number of stu dents and tha ut.usual work it is doing i for the betterment of the people 1 through its agricultural trains, its min i ing institutes and its apprentice schools iin various cities. The pamphlet also I contains the proceedings of a confer i ence of High School Principals of the state called to consider the relations between the public schools and the I college. A copy of the bulletin may !be obtained by addressing the Registrar, State College, Pa. | ... FIRST METHODIST EPISCOPAL. REV. J. F. ANDERSON, Pastor. Morning subject next Sabbath of the pastor's sermon will bp, "Kept in Peace by the Strenth of Jehovah;" j evening, "Results of Judging Others." ! Sunday scoof at 11:45 a. in., Epworth I League, 6:45 p. m. Choir rehersal Friday eveniner at 7:30 o'clock; new music. Seats in this church are free, and a welcome is given to all. Handsome Work. The large Sixth street dwelling own er! by the duPonts, has been treated to | a fresh coat of paint. .Maurice VVor j mouth was the artist and a good job he : made of it.