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^ LESS GOVERNMENT, BETTER. Dr. Abbott Says World Must Solve Problem of Brotherhood. Dr. Lyman Abbott was heard recently by more than 1,500 people in the auditorium of the board of commerce, says the Detroit Free Press. Dr. Abbott, who is the editor of the Outlook, is now 79 years old. He spoke on "The Coming Age." * "The government is a necessary evil," said Dr. Abbott. "It is a misfortune that we have to have any government at all. The less gov-i ernment there is the better. We must protect persons; we must protect business from violations and wrongdoings; therefore we must have armies and navies and laws, but the less laws and the less police and the less armies the better. "The sole idea of government is to protect life, liberty and property, and whpnever it undertakes to do anything more than that it is despotism. "This is not an age of despotism, nor is it an age of universalism; it is an age of fraternalism. All of you are brethren. Our problems are not theological; they are sociological. All problems are problems of brotherhood. "You will say, some of you, that I am a theorist. We must have theorists in the world, but we mu6t not have too many of them, j "Abraham Lincoln said: 'God has given to every man a pair of hands and a brain, and He has put the pair of hands and the brain into the samej man. which indicates that that brain! should regulate that pair of hands.' So long as the pair of hands are all regulated by one organization to get the most it can out of the brain, and the brains are all organized, on the other hand, to get all they can out of the pair of hands, so long we shall have industrial unrest, and we ought to. When we have learned to unite the brain and the hands in a common enterprise we shall have peace, and f not before. * "In this great America of ours there is one great orchestra. Some are leaders, not many, some play one instrument and some another, but our success lies in making the music our music, and I hope you gentlemen who are employers, and that means a great many of you, will figure out with actual men and women this great problem of brotherfnr vnnrcolvftc " *. ?^ , They Knew Who He Wasn't. ' * Col. George Harvey, the famous editor, according to the story they tell, visited his native Peachman a short time after his first brilliant New York success and, on a cold winter morning, entered the Peachman general store. But nobody, to his surprise, knew him. Colonel Harvey, seated with the Peachman veterans around the hot stove, could not reP;;V sist telling one or two of his minor " metropolitan successes?successes ? - which the Peachmanites heard in cold silence. "And I, too, am a Peachman boy," said Col. Harvey. "Yet nobody remembers me here. Strange!" He turned warmly to an old man n with red chin whiskers striped with \ , "You," he said, "are George Slocum." * " , He turned to another old man who j had very large, white, even false teeth. "You are George R. Boone," he , said. Then he turned to the whole circle of veterans round the stove and cried impulsively: "Somebody, surely, must remember my name. Come now. think! It's . . George?George?George"? . "Waal. judgin' from the tales ye bin a-givin' us," snorted an old fellow in gum boots. "I reckon it hain't George Washington, nohow."?Wash* ington Star. Severe Measure Demanded. A woman went into a New York police station and began reading the Bible to the officers in charge. She was arrested- promptly and taken to the Bellevue hospital insane ward * and subjected to observation. This recalls the story of the man who went into Westminister Abbey and knelt in the aisle to pray. Up ran a verger who collared the kneeling man and proceeded to turn him over to the police. "If I don't make an example of you. sir, we'll have people prayin' all over the church." Question Made Answer. Gov. Walsh, of Massachusetts, said of charity at a charity society's ban-j quet: "All depends on the spirit wherein j charity is sriven To uplift." as C.eoree j Ade once beautifully said, set underneath." "Otherwise the charitable person j receives the treatment of the lady who said to a poor washerwoman: | ""And does your husband drink?" ""No." answered the washerwo-j man. "Does your3?" " | i PROGRESS DID NOT STOP. ! Employee of Patent Office Thought I' All Inventions Were In. Some one poring over the old files in the I'nited States patent office at Washington the other day found a letter written in 1S33 that illusT ! trates the limitations of the human 1 imagination. It was from an em- w ployee of the patent office, offering n his resignation to the head of the 11 department, says the San Antonio n I.icrVit Uic raicnn n'ac that ac avprv thing inventable had been invented. Cl the patent office would soon be dis- a continued and there would be no 0 further need for his services or the Cl services of any of his fellow-clerks." He therefore decided to leave before a the blow fell. * \ V Everything inventable had been k invented! The writer of this letter Cl journeyed in a stage coach or a ca- ^ nal boat. He had never seen a limit- ' ed train or an ocean greyhound. He Sl read at night by candle light, if he read at all in the evening; more like- a ly he went to bed soon after dark and did all his reading by daylight. g He had never seen a house lighted ^ by illuminating gas. The arc and e incandescent electric lights were not ? - - . . ri to be invented ror nearly a nair cen- tury. If he had ever heard of elec- i? tricity, he thought of it as the mys- a terious ,and dangerous fluid that q strikes from the clouds duriag a n thunder storm. That it could be harnessed to do man's will had never Cl occurred to him. He had never heard the clicking 11 of a telegraph sounder. The telephone would have seemed as won- ? derful to him as a voyage to the 0 moon. .Motion pictures would have 11 j reminded him of black art, and the y idea that a machine could be invent- w I ed whereby a man would flytabove 11 [ the clouds like a bird, ascending and descending at will, would have seem- e ed to him merely absurd. The mod- e ern printing press, the linotype ma- a j chine, which seems almost to think; I the X-ray by means of which sur- a geons may diagnose disease and in- ^ jury and lay out their work with s scientific certainty, these things were s yet to be invented long after he was! c dead. He could not imagine the au-j ** tomobile, now so common that theyj B cover the streets and roads of all the a world. He could not dream that cannon Ci would be made to throw a projectile is T more than twenty miles, that repeat-1 * ing rifles, revolvers and machine! Q guns would be invented, that steel' Z: monsters of the deep would speed j g invisible under the seas with the I 0 power to send a giant ocean liner to! 51 the bottom within a matter of mo-! 0 , raents. He lacked the imagination | s' to see all the thousands and tens of; thousands of comparatively small in- Cf ventions that have come into being since his day, some of them for good and some for evil, but all telling a ! ji story of progress of one sort or another. Probably in this he did not differ from most of his fellow-;men in his day. It is very likely most of b his friends agreed with him that the I. limit of invention had been reached, h He seems, unfortunately, deficient in n imagination and in optimism, as we read of his letter of resignation in 3 the musty files of the patent office, y But let us not take too much unction p to our souls. We are as ignorant of w what the next eighty years mayjn bring forth as he was of the future c< of American inventions. n tl Tl- n. yyf VoafnAcc W 1 IIO I VI .imiiiwo u P Did you ever notice the difference g in the way you feel toward yourself p when you are compelled to go around {l in a shabby suit and when you go a abroad neatly clad from heels to ? head? Remember the time when w you were pretty well down and out. and had to go around looking for a a job in a suit of clothes that you t( wouldn't do your gardening in now? n You were licked before you started. _ says the Duluth Herald. You anticij pated as you entered the door the re- a. fusal that sent you cowed, out of it again. gl There's a lot in that feeling. w When Uncle George lent you the money for a new suit you braced up. tackled that job-hunting with a new ^ courage, and quickly got on your feet g] again. t( Did you ever stop to think that your home surroundings work in n. much the same way? -sj They do. whether you realize ft or t( not. Here's where "Clean-up week" ja gets its relationship to the psycholo- n, gy 01 nearness. ir your huuic is m ^ repair and not in need of paint, if your home grounds are clean and well kej>t. if your lawn is green and sightly and your yard neat and or- ^ derly. then your home environment n ministers to your self-respect and to your own judgment of your decent place in the community. tI Extra Weight. c( \-ix cents postage reo.uired. miss. What for?" "This letter is very heavy." "Pshaw." said the giri. "Now. I'm sorry 1 put la t::03e 3.000 kisses." M POSSESSES THE MAN POWER. nited States Could Soon Recruit a1 l.arge Force. It is not safe to infer that because he United States has a small mili-j iry organization it would be unable! 3 put forces in the field, says the j oronto Mail and Empire. If thej ar were to last only a few morej lonths that aid to the allies would, | ideed, be impossible and quite unecessary. But presuming the war 3 last beyond 1915 the United States ould, if the authorities wished, arm nd train quite a formidable body f men. There need be no misconeption as to that. The Civil war found both North I nd South unorganized in a military ay. Up to October, 1863, when ! oluntary enlistment practically eased in the North. 1,332.000 men' ent into the ranks. The South gotj 50,000 volunteers. Then the coneripiion acts came into force and !ie South obtained 1,100,000 men nd the North a total of 1,500,000 rom the various States by levy. The rand total obtained by President incoln was 2.89S.000, including renlistments, and 2.250,000 without, n both sides there were 2,000,000 ecruits who volunteered. The Spanih war thoueh a minor canmaien ffords another instance of how uicklv the United States could, on ecessity, organize military forces, f Canada, within six weeks of war, ould organize and equip.33,000 men ar the front, and within seven lonths have nearly 100,000 more or ?ss ready, what could the United tates, with it6 immense resources f men, material and money, not do l equal time? By the end of the ear the United States could, if it ished, have an army of a million i Europe. When war broke out Lord Kitchner had the task of gathering and quipping and training a civilian rmy of over 2,000,000. Those roops are now ready for the field, ccording to authoritative advices, ut must await fuller munition oranization. If that great feat is posible among the artisans, shop lerks, office workers and other oused-up workers of industrial iritain, how much more easily could nation of a hundred millions, as and of out-door life as the Amerians do as much. The man power > possessed by the United States, o transform it into military usefuless is merely a question of organiation. A nation with so much enerv. capacity and driving power as ur neighbors could quickly show re alts. It may be, of course, that the ccasion may not arise, but if it ftould the United States would be ir from as helpless as surface indiations seem to show. WAR BOOSTS DIAMONDS. lice of Gems Has Risen, Never to Come Down. All possessors of diamonds should e interested in the advice offered by Schrvver, who recently arrived ere to find customers for the dialonds cut at Amsterdam, Holland. "Save your diamonds," said Mr. chrvver, recently, according to New ork correspondence Washington ost. "The price is going up now; it ill continue to go up, and it will ever come down. The European onflict has affected the diamond larket to a great extent. In fact, lere are so few valuable diamonds eing sold now in Amsterdam that ractically all the cutters are idle, ixty-five per cent, of the men emloyed in the diamond-cutting works 1 Amsterdam are now without work, nd if the war continues the other 5 per cent, will also find themselves ithout employment. "'Ordinarily the disappearance of market for any commodity would ?nd to lower the price, but with dialonds it is different. The diamond larket of the world, and they see to ; that there is always an even bal-j nee maintained between the raw j laterial and the market, which reults in no decrease in the price hen the market is poor. "At the present time there are no lines in operation in South Africa, otwithstanding that fact, there is nough raw material in London now ) meet the demand from now until le end of the war I had a cable lassage this morning from London :ating that the price of rough ma;rial had gone up f> per cent, since ist week. I have been in this busiess for 27 years, and in all that me the price has been going up." When Mr. Schryver was asked iiemer ,\e? iuik un^ui i ike the place of Amsterdam as a, iamond centre, lie answered in the egative. "I do believe, however." he connued. "that Xew York will become le leading diamond market of the orld, because the people of this juntry will have more money than ny others in the world, and Xew ork will be the place to get the nished diamonds." Olendale Spring water on sale at! urdaugh's Grocery Store.?adv. ip??i m I High Price Paper I AT n A I D.J ~ J low r i lies i ' -700a K flNF HP OI'R <JPPfIAI TIPS 1 iu unu vi wit vi uvuiuiiu; u =rl Just Opened 1 J Our regular customers 1 *1 know what this state- M ment means, but if you have not been Inuring ?3 1 i* your box paper ot us, ' Jf you had better come in 1 and see for yourself. || | our jobber to take the entire line of drummers' samples. We get || paper worth from 25 cents to m $1.50 per box, and sell from m 10c to 40c Der box. You can fold every style and shape here. J We get all the new styles, but if | I you want the newest styles you -jf J have to select early. P I BETTER COME TO-DAY Herald Book Store ' MAII ORHFRS SOI ICITF.n iTAi~41U JL ^ JL^ UA -W ? VA A mmm ? Telephone 59-L Bamberg, S. C. i ! ;:>A b=: -J :zWgB : t . -