The Dillon herald. (Dillon, S.C.) 1894-????, April 22, 1909, Image 2
m
v The
jL p Life d/ Love, and ^
| IVhat It Depends On <?
* By Beatrice Fairfax S
] J OVE is the one thing in which every human being is lnter-?
ested. Scientists are interested in science, artists in art,
moneymakers in money, but to greater or less degree they
I X one and all are interested In love.
I You may be a disgruntled, sour old man or woman, but
"w + at some time in your life your heart has beaten Quicker at
1 the thought of seme one person.
KPp% Iti ? ? ? ? # Or, you may be a dreaming schoolgirl, or a rougn ana
tumble boy with a boy's hearty contempt for sentiment; but
your turn will come. Some day you will love.
Love is the one thing that makes the whole world kin.
Through all the millions of years, men and women have loved; and
through all the millions of years to come, tfcev will go on loving.
The strange thing about it is that the most wonderful thing in all the
world should be regarded as such a commonplace thing.
Hundreds of wise men and women ua"? written solemn discourses and
sentimental poetry on love, and yet today love is just as gossamer and iut&ngible
a thing as it was at the beginning.
It is at once the longest lived and the shortest lived thing in the world
It Is deep and it is shallow.
It is kind and it is cruel.
It thrives under neglect, and. again, it withers under kindness.
It is a garden rose, and an orchid.
It is ennobling. and it is decradine.
It is a thing apart from all other emotions, and it holds the whole world
In the hollow of its hand.
People continually ask me: "Miss Fairfax, what is love?"
That is a hard question to answer, because no one person can explain to
r another just what love is.
All people love differently. My way of loving might not be yours, nor
yours mine; and yet in her own way, each might love well.
But I have seen much of love. I have seen it thrive, and I have seen it
die; and about that I can tell you.
I have seen men and women kill love, inch by inch. Some have cloyed
it to death with sweets, others have killed it with bitterness.
Sometimes it has died hard; sometimes it has drooped and died at the
first blow.
There are many different ways of killing love. Perhaps you have killed
love. Perhaps some one has killed it for you.
Sometimes love goes limping along in a half-hearted way that is sadder
than death.
All those who would hold love must make up their minds to one thing,
and that is: That love must be all paramount; it must be the biggest, most
Important thing in their lives.
' It does not shut out all other interests, but it must come first.
In the articles to follow this you may recognize your own method of
killing love, or of keeping it alive.?From the New York Evening Journal.
=The
Outlook for Plain Folk f
fy Professor E. Ji. Ross J
J^y^r\rm *Ks~^r<0
#j i ?i HE newspaper cartoon is a democrat. Some day the inven\
tor of it will rank with Gutenberg, for in enlightening the
I people on public affairs it is to red ink and capitals what
?~ * the arc-light is to the tallow dip. Give it much of the
y credit for the growing failure of the bosses to hoodwink the
OkJj voters. It is like the Greek fire that saved civilization from
the Turks. Lie? Of course the machine, too, can launch
f. ? *ts carto?ns, but a false cartoon is like a wet rocket. It
Si does not go off.
Some, I know, will pooh-pooh my showing. "You are behind the times,"
.hear them say. "Actually the trend is all the other way. How about the
ilfio'ule of Big Business in American cities and states? Have not special inter;sts.
workinc throusrh Dartv machines, made self-eovernment a fiction? And
f democracy has become a sham in the hov.se of its guardians, what hope is
Johere for it elsewhere?"
Bu?. No. What has been lost is not democracy, but certain fruits of decoc4
acy. The interests have their way only because they work in the dark?
always in the dark. They contrive to fool enough of the people enough of
wJie time. There is robbery by the mailed fist, and robbery by the lithe
hand. The feudal classes spoiled the people like a Front de Boeuf, the corp
porations today filch from us like Fagin. The plain people here are not weak,
.as they are in Russia, but they have not been taking notice?that is all.
S They have been too sure, too careless, too trusting. But it will not take genx
* erations of slow upbuilding to put the people again at the helm. Ring the
tocsin a few years, and we shall see who is master.?From Everybody's.
sedlt
start.
| Fat Foods and their Uses |
^ By Dr. L. F. Bryson ^
T is impossible to say what will please in the way of fat
0 X j? food. The only way is to experiment, feeling sure that the
< i"i * T right thing will eventully appear. When commonplace fat
"r i ^ J offends, something new and strange will often Inspire reT
* spect and be received with delight. Children who scorn
X ,at >n the abstract seldom refuse a light, well-made suet
11* 1 iftrSl 11 PuddJnK- Toast and dripping is a combination that has been
known to charm when less humble fare is declined. Toffee,
w?ich is a combination of equal parts of sugar and melted
butter, is a highly nutritious substance that is a general favorite among chll*
dren. Given at the end of a meal, it can seldom do harm. Equal parts of
*,lu chopped fat meat, lean meat, and bread crumbs, the whole lightly seasoned
it t with pepper and salt and a dash of powdered sugar, make an agreeable Oiling
dtai *or sandwiches that are often acceptable to those who insist that they do not
i* like fat.?Harper's Bazar.
i
1 < V l i rli -L .1,.?. ,i, ,r, *, rf.j. ?,-t- I y
*
rt
Q J- flff rt
4 "Women s Revolution"
I By "Dubious" !
9
, .1 NE result of the "V/omen'3 Resolution'' women themselves
may well consider: If it becomes general, it means the per1
j ishlng with startling suddenness of most of the progressive
raceB of the world?the French, German, English, Scandlna.
.-r== vlan, Spanish, Scottish, Italian, Australian, English-American,
Hungarian and Slavic stock. These must all pass
away, as the New Englander of native descent is passing
now.
It means the actual conquest of the earth, within the
lifetime of women now living, by Negroes and lower-class Chinese, East Indiana
and Malays. Only the rapidly decreasing number of those who bear
L children from reasons of religion, and the Japanese, who reverence their
? national ideal above personal ambition or Indulgence, will survive to cast a
| little gleam of light upon a world slipping back to the mental and moral
1 level of the cave-men.
L 1 Can a movement be whollv rood whose consequences, already visible la
I their swift beginning*, arc so Btupend?>ua?
'
?Oar
PRICES OF WHEAT7N
PRODUCE AT
Flonr So Dear Bakers Are*
Size by a Heavy
IS THERE A VE(
No Such Sums Paid in a Decade
Cto.t Yet Retailers Say tfc
Wholesalers Deny Th<
Chicago.?James A. Patten -was
rictorious again, when he was able to
sell more of his May wheat at the
record price of 51.38. The deal for
a time worked out very well for Mr.
Patten, but the real burden is being
borne by the people, who are working
hard for their loaves of bread and
are getting less and less for their
money every day on account of the
high price of flour, consequent upon
the advance in the price of wheat.
Bakers admit that bread is more
expensive than it has been for a long
time, although the increase is carefully
concealed from the buying public.
The retail price of bread is still
five cents a loaf, but if housewives
were to take the trouble to weigh
the loaves which they purchase they
would soon discover that they are
rapidly diminishing in weight, although
the size may remain the same.
Corpulent loaves can be manufactured
by a heavy charge of atmosphere,
but that counts for little when
it comes to assauging the pangs of
hunger. Bakers are not taking at
all kindly to the game of boosting
the stafT of life now being played on
the Board of Trade.
New York City.?While the Patten
bulls in wheat in Chicago rushed
prices up to war quotations, something
of the kind happened in the
local market for vegetables and
fruits. In Washington Market, for
instance, dealers were getting 57 and
57.25 a barrel for Bermuda potatoes,
as against 55.50 a year ago. Asparagus
sold at 55 a dozen bunches, as
against 53.25 a year ago, and let
tuce brought twenty-flve cents for
three heads about as big as a man's
hand. A year ago dealers were glad
to get ten cents for three heads. Cucumbers
sold for six to ten cents
each.
Apples are almost as scarce as
wheat. Seven dollars a barrel Is the
nominal quotation, but only the big
dealers have any to sell, and the best
are being sent to London. The New
York State crop .was badly damaged
by the dry spell last summer, and
when it was sought to put the apples
in cold storage they wouldn't keep.
Colorado apples were similarly affected.
Thousands of barrels, dealers
say, rotted and had to be thrown
away. The vegetable market has
I been stiffened lately by three severe
frosts in Virginia, which killed all
growing stuff, and the farmers have
had to replant.
The keeper of a small fruit and
vegetable stand In Washington Market
said that, while it would be deI
nied, he was sure there vu a trust
which controlled wholesale prices and
I had put them ud to the Dresent hiah
level.
"The United Fruit Dealers' Association
1b doing this," he said, "and
it tells us prices are going still
higher. Every dealer in this place
payB the same price. There Is no escape.
The bulk of the vegetable
stuff we sell at this season comes
from Charleston, S. C.; Bermuda
and Florida, both by rail and steamship.
Some stuff also comes from
California. There seems always a
scarcity, though now, after the Easter
demand has subsided, prices ought to
go down. The Virginia frost will be
? -* ?
It Is a Crime to Give or Take
a Tip In Washington State.
Spokane, Wash. ? Advance sheets
of the new criminal code adopted at
the rccpnt s??<nn of T
show that It contains a strict antltlpplng
law, which provides that
"every employe of a public house or
public service corporation who solicits
or receives any gratuity from any
guest and every person giving any
gratuity shall be aullty of a misdemeanor."
i This was the first Intimation that
such r. law pas*':! the Legislature.
OB tOUVUVG LADIES' HAH W CHURCH
Ifcjjjgg?
loon by l'rigga, in the Mew York l'ress.
ID GARDEN
THE HIGHEST NOTCH
Keeping Loaves at Usual
Charge of Air.
iETABLE TRUST?
Fop Potatoes, Lottuco, Asparagus.
i* Profit is Not Theirs-iro
is a'Combination.
used now as an excuse for the high
prices. We are making no money at
all."
Several other dealers said they
didn't know whether there was a
trust or not, but they were aware that
prices for all garden stuff hadn't
been so high in a decade. One result
of the high prices had been to
force some of the small dealers out
of business. Quite a number of stalls
in Washington Market have "For
Rent" signs on them.
A member of the firm of John Nix
& Co., who are said to be largest
wholesale dealers in fruits and vegetbles
in New York City, and who have
buyers in California, Florida, Bermuda,
the Carollnas, England and
elsewhere, was asked about the
charge that there was a fruit and vegetable
trust.
"Never beard of it," he said, "and
there is no such trust. If any man or
set of men tried to corner the market
he or they would fail. There are too
many sources of supply. It is true
prices are high, but the demand is
here, and the law of supply and demand
rules.
"Naturally we get all we can for
our goods. My opinion is that the
uiuccib /vssocianon ib responsible
for the present high prices. Long after
wholesale prices have dropped,
grocers go on charging the high
prices irrespective of market conditions.
The consumer should trade
more carefully and not pay such
prices as are exacted. If he would
study the markets more carefully, the
grocers would soon find It out, and
prices would be more reasonable."
Owing to the high prices ruling
for potatoes, large quantities are
being shipped here from England.
The wholesale price of Southern potatoes
is now around $3.50 a bag,
the tarilT on each bag, seventy cents,
proving no obstacle. The steamer
Minnehaha brought in from London
: 54,000 bags of Scotch potatoes.
NO MORE CHEAP WIIEAT.
Head of Patten Corner Predicts Con*
tinued High Prices.
Chicago. ? James A. Patten responded
to a telephone" call from a
country miller who wanted to buy a
I round lot of cash wheat. Before
leaving the telephone booth he personallv
sold KOOft hnnhola Mn 9 rail
wheat at 11.38, free on board cars
here, which is the highest price of
the year yet accorded for this grade.
He expressed himself as being decided
bullish on July wheat, believing
it will reach even a higher level
before the next harvest than yet recorded
for May contracts. He believes
all of the new crop months,
which are now at a great discount
under cash wheat, will have a big
rise in values.
"We will see no more cheap wheat
in this country till there is more extensive
production to meet the growing
consumption demands," continued
Mr. Patten. "I see little chance
for this increase in production in this
country this year because farmers all
over the Northwest declare there is
more money in raising oats and barley
than putting the land to wheat."
new Brand of Night Rider Activity
Reveals Itself in Indiana,
Indianapolis, Ind.?Renters of land
In Southern Indiana are notifying
landlords that they will not work
land on shares, and investlgattor
shows that many of them have beer
notified that if they till land for lest
than two-thirds of the crop theli
crops will be destroyed.
An organisation has been formed
in Pike and other counties on th<
plan of the night riders.
T*nd owners have refused to rent
! for less th?n h4.lt c;op;.
I MIX ?"d-miffr
' i
THE PHIIIPPIN]
Message Asking for a Rei
Tariff to Extend the Pr
Tariff for Its Industrie
Washington, Special.?The Prosi- 1
dent Thursday sent to Congress a 1
special message regarding the Philip- |
pine tariff . This message transmits ^
recommendntinns hv the Secretary of
' :,'i of the Philip- ,
I ' 11 - > |>crmit as much ,
c - possible for the
i . ame time to ex- ^
t' the nrineinlo of
a protective tariff for its industries. (
Under the conditions which will arise
from the enactment of the tariff bill ,
pending in Congress, which provides
under certain conditions for free (
trade between the Philippines and the j
United States, the revenues of the j
islands will be considerably affected, j
and numerous protests have been re- ,
ceived here on this acount.
The message was submitted to both j
houses of Congress shortly after they
convened. Generally speaking the bill
submitted by the President makes a ,
slight increase in the rates of duty
now provided in the PhiliDDine tariff. ,
but its framcrs say its tendency is to
insure as far as practicable the bene- j
fit of the Philippine market for
American manufactures and products. .
The President's Message.
The President's message follows: {
"To the Senate and House of Repre- 1
sentatives: 1
"I transmit herewith a communication
from the Secrttarv of War, en- t
closing one from the chief of the t
bureau of insular affairs, in which t
is transmitted a proposed tariff re- 1
vision law for the Philippine Islands.
"This measure revises the present '
TABLE SHOWING PRESENT
CHANGES IN THE TARIf f C
The Payne Tariff Bill, as passed
changes made, as compared with *he
inal Payne bill and the Dingley law:
Articles Dingley Law C
Ooffee Free of duty F
Tea Free of tlu y 8
Cocoa Free of duty 4
Petrbleum Fieeof duty F
Barley 30 cents a bushel 1!
IHarlevMa.lt ?**
Hides 15 i>er cent F
Itoupd and hewn; lc
Timber per cubic foot 1Lumber,
undnishcd 32.00 per 1 000 feet U
Lumber, finished two
sides 32.00 tier 1.000 feet $1
Sawed Lumber #2.uo to #3.50 per 1,000 ft. #1
Copperas Free of duty F
Glue worth under 10c.. 2 1-2 cents a pound 2(
Glue worth over 35c ... 15c lb. plus2o per ceui. 2i
Crude Barytes 75 cents per ton 7!
Fluorspar Free 5<
Raw Mica 0c lb, plus 20 per cent.. S(
Cut Ml a 12c lb, plus 20 pA Cent. &
Bar lion - (eh a r co a 1
made) 312 per ton &
Ferrosillcon #4 per ton it
Forromangancsp ?4 per ton If
Briar Root Free 5
Saccharine 31.50 lb, plus 10 per cent 2."
Turkish Filler Tobacco
(unstemmed) 35 cents a pound 3i
Turkish Filler Tobacco
(stemmeJ) 50 cents a pound 5t
Pease (greep) 30 cents per bushel 3t
Evergreen Seedlings... 31.00 1,000. plu> 15 per ct, gl
Pineapples 7 ceuts per cubic foot..
gloves (ground) Free of duty 3t
loves (unground) Free of duty 3t
Cotton Jaguard Goods. New entry
Medlcited Cotton New entry 4;
Shirts, Collars and *
Cuffs (cotton made) . 45c dor, plus 15 per ot.. ?
Silk Suspenders and
Garters 50 per cent 6(
811k Bandings ? (hat
bands) 50 per cent Ot
811k and Velvet Boxe3. New entry
Basic Pnoto Papers.... 3c lb, plus 10 per cent.. 3<
Decalcomanias New entry #:
Wrapping Paper New entry 3i
Blasting Caps $2.30 per 1,000 31
Manufactures of Fair. 20 per cent Leather
8hoe Laces 50c gross and 20 per ct. 11
Nut OH . .. 25 per cent 21
Platinum Vases, Hetorts
and Apparatus. 45 per cent F
Philippine ltlce '2 cents a pound F
FOURTEEN LOSE THEIR
San Francisco, Special.?Six bod- i
ies recovered and probably 8 or 10 ]
olbers buried in the ruins; six injur- J
ed, on fatally; property loss $125,000 t
?these are the results of a fire Fri- 1
day that destroyed the St. George 1
Hotel, a lodging house for laborers !
at Howard and Eighth streets. Eiirht
other small buildings were burned. 1
The bodie* taken to the morgue were 1i
FUNERAL SERVICES O
Columbia, S. C., Special. ? Thf 1
funeral of Gen. M. ?. Butler, who
died Wednesday night in this city,
was held Friday morning in St.
Peter's Catholic church at 10 o'clock.
The church was tilled with the friends
and ' eneral Butler and i
his requiem mass was
said ! >. Fleming. Bishop i
Nor ne up from Chari
lest* > ral read the prayer
l for ' ? ited by Rev. T. J.
L Heg t: Mr. Hughes. The
[ fun -i 1 was preached by
Fat Kb i ,i vbo had been with
F/ ECKl^ENBUF
[ Duuville, Va., Special.?The beauti- .
\ ful Mecklenburg Hotel at Chase City,
\ 70 miles east of this city on the Keysi
ville and Durham branch of the i
i Southern Railway, was destroyed by
" Are Friday afternoon. The hotel was
. an expansive frame structure, built
t 10 yeas ago by the Mecklenburg
Springs Corporation at a cost, includt
ing furnishings of $200,000. At the
J timr f. .Hie tire, it was o^nod by tbel
fTiiFlffil
rision of the Philippine 1
inctple of a Protective
is Sent to Congress.
Philippine tariff, simplifies it and
makes it conform as nr n* po*
sible to the regulations >< his
toms laws of the Unitt o
pecially with respect to ' nti
packages. The presen ! ppuu
regulations have been >nif \
and difficult for Americ. ut-i /
and exporters to cornp! >.t T
purpose is to meet the n < .
that will arise under ti < " ) j
TT,? ! a _ 5 rii .
me jjcuuiiifj unnea ciiai' ' n->l
which provides, with c? m:'d
tions, for free trade ;lit
United States and the Islands. It is
Irawn with a view to preserving tht \
islands as much customs revenue ai I
possible, and to protect in a reason- 1
able measure those industries which
now exist in the islands.
"The bill, now transmitted, hat I
been drawn by a board of tariff ex- I
perts, of which the insular collectoi # I
jf customs, Col. George R. Colton, 1
was the president. The board he'd
\ great many open meetings in
Manila, and conferred fully with representatives
of all business interesta
in the Philippine Islands. It is ai
?reat importance to the welfare ol
[he islands.
"The bill should be passed at the
?ame time with the pending Payne
jill, with special reference to the prorisions
of which it was proposed.
"I respectfully recommend that
[his bill be enacted at the present
session of Congress as one incidental
o, and required by, tre passage of the
Payne bill
WILLIAM H. TAFT.
'The White House, April 14, 1909."
RATES AND PAYNE Bill
IN IMPORTANT ARTICLES
by the Houso shows the following
rates in similar articles in the origUtlOINAL.
PaYXE lill.l PaRREO ut HOCSU '
roe with countervail Free of duty
cents a Dound .. viw- a, ?,*
cents a pound 3 cents a pound
ree with countervail Free of duty
1 cents a bushel 24 cents a bushel
> cents a bushel 40 cents a bushel
ree of duty Free of duty ..
2c per cubic foot Half cent cubic foot..;
( cents per 1,000 feet.. 50c per 1.000 feet
1.S0 per thousand ft... it.SO per 1.000 feet
I to <2.50 l.ooo feet ?1 to?62.50 1.000 feet
ree of duty 15-100 of lc per pound..
> per cent 2 1-2 cents per pound ..
> per cent 15c lb, plus 20 pei cent.
> cents a ton SI.50 per ton
)c toil.75 per ton 11.50 per ton
) per cent 5c lb. plus 20 per cent..
> per cent 10c lb. plus 20 per cent.
i a ton i\0 per ton
i per cent $4 per ton
1 per cent $1 per ton
per cent 25 per cent
> per cent 50 cents per pound
> cents a pound '. 75 cents per pound
1 cents a pound $1 per pound
1 cents a bushel 25 cents per buatiel ....
, 1,000. p us 15percU .. Free of uuty
\ per 1,000 gri 1.000. or Be cubic foot
) per cent 2 l-2c per pound
I per cent Free of duty..#
50 per cent
> per cent 20 per cent
>c doz, plus 10 per ct.. 45c doz, plus 15 per ct..
) per cent 50 per cent
) per cent 50 per cent
50 per cent ?
; lb, pins20 per cent.. 3c lb, plus 10 per Jent..
4.50 per pound so cents per pouiM
) per cent 25 per cent M.
J per cent $2 per 1,000 F.
i per cent 20 per cent 1
5 per cent floe irross and 10 per ct..
J per cent Free of duty
'ree of duty 45 per cent
'ree of duty 2 cents per pound
! LIVES IN HOTEL FIRE
jo charred that identification was impossible.
The hotel was a three-story *
frame building. It burned so rapidly
that none of the 180 guests lqid time
to dress. Many escaped by jumping
to the roof of an adjoining workshop
Scores clambered down the firemen'l
ladders and the fire escapes on the
building. Four jumped to safety in
a net held by the lire fighters.
F GEN. Nlfc. BUTLER
General Hutler frequently during hit
last illness and who was with hirt
at the time of his death,
eloquent tribute to Gent
services as a soldier an<, nt i ?au
and spoke in affectiona .
him as a man. In his fui sei <>>ij
over General Butler, the it . Fal.Ji.-i
Fleming gave this explan.i :i !? w
General Butler came to if... ?
fnith: "The Little Sisl< < ' t.',i
Poor first drew my ntte t!i4
Catholic church. Their I .r-. 1 i,K
lives, leaving home and lu
'stor to the outcast, the hu?ueie?a, ou*
aged, the forgotten of the world."
IG HOTEL IS BURNED
estate of M. L. T. Davis, of Norfolk,
and was leased and managed by W. T. ^
Hughes, who had conducted it for
several years. The owners carried
only $75,000 insurance on the hotel
and equipment. Only about 30 guest*
were registered at the hostelry at the
time of the fire. The structure, ??tuated
on an eminence just outside ft
town had hrmdrod : ust vimtn- ij
bars, alt well furnished. m
.A