The Lancaster news. (Lancaster, S.C.) 1905-current, April 11, 1913, Page 2, Image 2
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WILSON DRIVERS . ~
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TARIFF MESSAGE Z
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/ quir
Shatt?rii>g All Precedents, He Tells clea;
('(tngfeni Wbat Should be Done? Pect
Must Keep Party Pledges. Thf;
, radl
Washington, April 9.?President Df c
W^son yesterday abridged the gap COUi
that for over a century has sep- jast
. arated the pilots of public business fa(.e
?>the executive and legislative and
branches of the government. Not chai
as a cog in a machine, not as an im- taril
personal political entity, nor as a wha
mere department of government, begs
but as the human President he went tlon
to Congress to speak about the c-irci
tariff. velo
Standing before the senate and task
house in joint session, as no other
President had done for more than oonc
112 years, President Wilson stated fron
simply and tersely what he thought the
should be done for the welfare of be f
the country and asked his legisla- ture
tive colleagues, man to man, to aid lnstt
in keeping the pledges of their and
party.
At two minutes before 1 o'clock \\
-1 * * 1 * ' -* * I
neaiuwi enwireu me cuuuiuer. want
Members of the house and senate very
rose and Speaker Clark brought whic
down the gavel. From the floor and had
galleries distinguished guests look- tion.
ed on at the scene. Ambassadors squa
from many lands were iu the audi- thinj
ence, members of the cabinet were of a
there and all the people who pos- prim
sibly could get In were present to legis
witness the proceeding. ago
President Wilson, escorted by tion
Senator Bacon, bowed ncknowledg- of tl
ment to the applause and mounted forw
the speaker's stand to the journal entit
clerk's desk, directly in front of the the
speaker. With a smile, as he began ?a
to speak, the President told his tive
hearers why he had come. He said her i
he was glad to verify for himself ?we
the impression that the President schec
of the United States was a person, ruani
He was speaking iu an ordinary they
tone of voice, just as though he need*
were talking to a senator in his ticall
office. The crowded chamber was the i
hushed after the momentary thrills or ui
of conversation upon his entrance a set
had ebbed away. Every eye was fixed from
upon him as he spoke and it was was
Instautly apparent that he had fornn
aroused the keenest interest. As mono
the President proteelea with his norm
preliminary . statement, averring the t
that he was not a mere department in 01
of the government, but human and every
that he had come to speak naturally rang*
with his fel'ow men, the interest actioi
was tense. crysti
FEEL QUITE NOHM.VL romp
"After tliis pleasant experience," 'U'irk
the President -said, I "shall feel Pendi
quite normal in all our dealings
with one another." must
As these words fell from the 'hing
President's lips the house and sen- l>r
ate applauded Then tlie gallery 'h'htl
joined in. Mrs Wilson and the
President's daughters and other s^imu
relatives joined from tin executive ')f
gallery. Ambassador Brvce nf 'erpr
England, looked on with evident In- suPre
torest. So did Ambassador Jusser- nier<"'
and, of France, and representatives -^s'de
from other nations. Where a few s
moments before the event had a,,'-v
seemed unnatural, almost unreal, it and 1
now appeared perfectly adjusted to aml 1
conditions and not at all dramatic. nUf's
The applause subsiding, tie* I'resIdent
began to read his brief mes- ,u>
sage on the tariff. !!<? spoke slow- ,i,1R 1
ly and forcefully and in e-ss than I
eight minutes he was done. No in w?>rld
terruption occurred and he left the
stand immediately while tin- Con- "
.gress applauded. ward
IN SPEAKERS ROOM. less 1
In the speaker's room again ",l '
President Wilson chatted for a few 1,1 al
moments with the members of tin- ',I
committee and accompanied by "''''1
Secretary Tumulty left the capitol '* an(
ai i:iu o oiock .m i is. luiit an ?
hour alter he loft the cabinet meet- ,nnk<'
ing, ho was at luncheon in the >ur '
White House, ready for the business
of the afternoon. whoU
THE PKKSIDKNT SPKAKS. lutior
President Wilson began his mes- j mus^
sage as follows: eign i
I am very glad indeed to have t,u" '
this opportunity to address the two ,1,an
houses directly and to verify for
myself the impression that the iU'?Pt
President of the United States is a
...<11 1
person, not a men; department of ""l 1
the government, hailing Congress
from some Isolated island of jealous
power, sending messagos, not
speaking naturally and with his own
voice, that he is a human being ject
trying to co-operate with other hu- troul;
man beings in a common service. rllou
After tliis pleasant expe. '.ace I
shall feel quite normal in all our ton,
dealings with one another. with
I have called the Congress to- wr^
gether In extraordinary session liecause
a duty was laid upon the ters
party now in power at the recent prov<
election which it ought to perform
promptly, In order that the burden
carried by the people under existing j macy
i
THE LANCA
may be lightened as soon as ing with the tariff
ible and in order, also, that the which this may be
ness interests of the country matter of judgment,
not be kept too long in sus- by item. To some
le as to what the fiscal changes to the excitements a
to be to which they will be re- ties of greater free<
ed to adjust themselves. It is ods may in some j
r that the whole country ex- some points seem he
s the tariff duties to be altered, dies may be heroic a
y must be changed to meet the dies. It 1b our bus
cal alterations in the conditions sure that they are
>ur economic life which the dies. Our object is
ltry has witnessed within the motive is above just
generation. While the whole only an occasional
and method of our industrial meut is chargeable
-I-' 1 0)1 oil hn fnrlnnolo
t'uiiiuicixiai nit; weit; ut*ui^ ?"?* * w? ivikuunw.
lged beyond recognition the We are called upo
ff schedules have remained country a great servi
t they were before the change ters than one. Ou
in, or have moved In tile direc- should be met and
they were given when no large should be thorough,
nmstance of our industrial de- moderate and well <
pment was what it is today. Our ed upon the facts as
is to square them with the not worked out as
al facts. The sooner that is giniiers. We are to
i the sooner we shall escape facts of our own day
i suffering from the facts and of no other, and to m
sooner our men of business will square with those fa
ree to thrive by the law of na- indeed it is necessarj
(the nature of free business) the tariff. 1 will ur
>ad of by the law of legislation on you now at the c
artificial arrangement. session which can ot
PAST EXPERIENCE. object or divert our
e have seen tariff legislation that clearly defined
tier very far alleld in our day? later time I may t
far indeed from the field in calling your
h our prosperity might have reforms which shoi
a normal growth and stimula- upon the heels of tht
No one who looks the facts uot accompany t
rely in the face or knows any- the chief is the refor
; that lies beneath the surface '"K and currency law
ction can fail to perceive the 1 refrain. For the
?iples upon which recent tariff these matters on one
lation has been based. We long only of this one
passed beyond the modest no- changes in our fiscal
of "protecting" the industries tnay best serve to o
tie country and moved boldly the free channels o!
ard to the idea that they were a great people wh<
led to the direct patronage of serve to the utmos
government. For a long time out both rank and fil
time so long that men now ac- .
in public policy hardly remem- Tl?e American
the conditions that preceded it "While Americans
s have sought in our tariff be self-centered it f
lules to give each group of shine, they are invai
lfacturers or producers what be self-sacrificing in
themselves thought that they tress."
2d in order to maintain a prac- This thoughtful co
y exclusive market as against President Marshall c
est of the world. Consciously wide sympathy and
11 consciously, we have built up going forth to the fl
of privileges and exemptions Ohio and Indiana dt
competition behind which it herent quality of our
easy by any, even the crudest, pie. Americans are
s of combination to organize narily for their alert
poly; until at last nothing is Cal affairs, their ag(
al, nothing is obliged to stand trade, their genius
ests of efficiency and economy, vast industries and
lr world of big business, but fortunes. They are
thing thrives by concerted ar-j their Mechanical skill
ment. Only new principles of proached for their s<
u will save us from a final hard | ialism. They are son
alization of monopoly and a . <?<! as a nation of in or.
1 nf f hn 1 .
...*. ... .-> in.ii money spenders.
en enterprise and keep inde- These, after all, ho
?nt energy alive. surface traits; they a
is plain what those principles the market place, t
he. We must abolish every- impulses of heart and
that bears even the semblance ever the time and
ivilege or of any kind of arti- forgetfillness and h
advantage, and put our busi- arise, the American s
men and producers under the jy rings true. Ther
ilation of a constant necessity country in the wori
efficient, economical, and en- great donations to
Ising, masters of competitive purposes are made
meacy, better workers and none where human
lants than any in the world, want bestir a wider
from the duties laid upon ar- erous response,
which we do not, and prob- No sooner had the
can not. produce, therefore, the news of the flood
the duties laid upon luxuries there began spent;
nerely for the sake of the reve- throughout tiie natioi
they yield, the object of the t() raise relief funds
duties henceforth laid must scriptions have not b
te< ti\e competition, the whet- any one section or to
>f Amerii an wits by contest of people. Thousand
the wits of the rest of the the most modest of
responded as prompti
dAKES HASTE SLOWLY. great wealth; and wr
would be unwise to move to- dreii have joined in
this end headlong, with reck- donations. Aatlanta
uiste, or with strokes that cut ,
\ery roots of what has grown VN Al'ltll. MOlf
lldliirsl us l.v lieiir nmfnea ""I
r own invitation It does not * ra" wt W(,rms and
a thing to upset it and break whistlin heart
i deprive u of a chance to Tl,e ol<l Path down
[( destroys it We tnust hole that catbil
changes in our fiscal laws, in tree!
iscal system. whose object is ' endi and catfish b
>piuent, a more free and a'ld bitin
some development, not revo- ^ ''at ever went Torth
i or upset or confusion We pole and a bunc
build up trade, especially for- a fan
trade. We need the outlet and '^Pr" mornin with ti
nlarged field of energy more but threatenia :
we ever did before. We must llt<"
tip industry as well, and must moans all that
freedom In the plate of arti- n,ld a"
stimulation only tft> far as it il
build, not pull dov^i. In deal- l'le ''b'" ?ut
I : every mile a-sm
Pains in the s/mach. Uke violets, mehbe.
you continuallwcomplain of. or %v',ateNer nat
in the atomacM your liver or leaf and blossom t
kidneys are ouvof order. Neg- 1 on the breast
may Ifcid to fropsy, kidney < irth-mother
de, dlabf\'S or Bright's disease, i . ... ,
sands re<\nmJd Klectric Bit- | c ertainly, lend you
as the ve\ hist stomach and , bait when ever
y medicine Twfide. H. T. Ala- brother!
of Italeigh, N. C., who suffered riie Benztown Bar
pain in the stomach and back. ^
s: "My kidneys were derang- l,,r,ore Sun
id my liver did not work right.
ff. red much, but Klectric Bit- IjflllCclStcr Lcfl
was recommended and I 1m-j _ 4
;d from the first dose. I now For Weakness and
like a new man. It will im- ...
* > ??. too. only Site and 11.00.!
mmended by LfinchBtcr I*liar- MnUrifi nnd huiMn up th/ ?
' and Standard Drug Co. uUnurcAppet./cr. For^iu
/
/ ' V ? " ':(
STER NEWS, APRIL ll. 19
the method b>' CATTTO P ADA
done will be a OUU1 ll IAKU
uxerciaeu iteui
r ORATORIG
dom our methrespects
and at
irolc, but reme- To be Held in Rock H
nd yet be reme- Annual Debate, Da
dness to make Game,
genuine remeclear.
It our Special to The NcwB
; challenge and Rock Hill, April
error of judg- of people from all
against us, we Carolina, with many
lug states, are mak
u to render the ments to be In Rod
ce in more mat- intercollegiate oratorh
r responsibility April 25. The rail;
our methods state have granted i
as thorough as rate of four cents i
considered, bas- way, a 20 per cent
i they are, and the usual rate. This
if we were be- wlll be effective Apri
i deal with the tickets will be good l
, with the facts nf April 26.
lake laws which Arrangements are
cts. It is best, give all who atteud i
r to liopln uiltli '
, ? ?D? ....... itme nme. rue annut
ge nothing up- jn honor of the debs
ipening of your players will be the bl
>scure that tlrst the history of the 01
energies from elation. Two ball gi
1 duty. At a Citadel and Newb
ake the liberty teams will be pulled
attention to 2 5, one in the mornii
aid press close the afternoon. At t
5 tariff changes, game some seven hum
hem, of which girls will be on tin
m of our bank- cheer their favorites
s, but just now Following the award!
present I put at the oratorical conte
side and think will be given at Win
thing?of the in honor of the spei
I system which and noted visitors. '
pen once more the college hoys and
f prosperity to as well an opportunity
am we would Winthrop students,
t and through- On Saturday there v
e. between Carolina and
College of North Ct
Spirit. game will be witness*
may seem to crowd, as all who de
?eriods of sun- ran remain over and
iably found to vantage of the reduced
times of dis- There are nine colli
have a contestant f<
mment of Vice Each institut
in the nation- a,on? tt delegation of
help that are cheer thelr represent
ood victims of 'M**t efforts. I lie pre
iscrihes an in- ^Winthrop students wil
country's peo- added incentive to tin
known ordi- d? their best. By the
ness in practi- coming to Rock Hill
jressivenoss in
for organizing <i|t,.ATNKHS 0?. THK
ll 111 111 inn oono# 1
" 1?K"TI'KK HK(17,1
admired for
and often re- For many years we
>-called mater- r,';i<b>rx ot the grea
# , moving pictures are d
letiines regard- ,n the w^rl(1
icy-makers and Young men and old
think of the moving p:
wever, are but possibilities. (Jreat |
, | written for the niovln
re the ?ajs of i (jr?>at actors and act
lot the deeper developed by the mc
home. When- which demands and n
need for self- expression and the onv
, , .. action.
Dip of others o,(| Qreek de,
pirit unfailing- that which is beaiitlf
e is no other j man body, in human el
Id where such bjuman form, will be
... . a higher scale than ev
philanthropic | ptcture8 and Uu.,r
and there is the actor.
sufTering and The moving pictun
or more gen- knowledge which has
ly absorbed a pleasur
light to children,
wires brought The school board of
disasters than ; Norwood, in this sta
aneously and | chased a moving pic
tor the Kverett school
a movement | Thf> gn.at ?tate ol
These sub- , foremost in education,
ecn limited to moving picture machii
any one class lar part ot the public t
? ... Hefore long every
s of men with srhool houge wlll kit
Incomes have i picture machine, and
ly as those of will teach the childr
me n and chil- ,n on? more tha
be taught in a week
the generous ..agafn*t thf> prain Journal.
The lives of great
made familiar to ehili
vIV FISH. ing pictures before th<
reached tin* age of ten
a slender pole'"1"1 Pirls win huve i,]
, the great events of tli
coin, front his cabin v
to the fishin' dow to his death In th?
rti owns that impressed upon their
pictures.
. , The great l?atties t
itin they say, Uu> ^ ^
t est man these can be reprotiu
with a slender he reproduced and
h of worms in moving pictures for
and delight of tnillin
lions.
right sun out. Science and astron
rain next mi .- taught in moving pi
that are dull will be
it holds itself moving pictures?for
ject of the educator
>ur heart puts tj1{i imagination.
How many men rc
of the air. and moving picture, among
.tin. will diminish the cxc
. . alcohol?
or pcpp? rmint, Men set fire to thel
ure's spelli 4" whiskey because tliey
>f flowerv light ment, they want the b
of our great If the>' cannot have
tlon they want false I
The false stimulant
rny polo and gives to the brain tin
you want, aiy
For Burns, Bruises
. ,, . The quickest and si
A,. In Tim Bal- bruns> {,rulgeH( bollfl(
mation and all skin
nucKieu s a mice sal
days It cured L. II. I
l dell, Tex., of a Sore^
. awhich pained hitri so b
oss of Appetite ly walk Should 'foe li
?tr.-nKthrnin(r tonic, f)nlv 25c Rernrrimn
I TONIC, drives out '??* , ",, 7^
ystrm. a true tonic master I harcnacy and ?.
Us and children. 30c. CO.
>13.
UNA III
ALMEET Compi
lill April 23? *. r.
ince and Ball A^Ua VvV
10.?Hundreds y of-Foo
hart nt Qaii#V? 11 I
from adjoin.- | Made with differei
ing arrangeL.'Z,"
From a of
roads of the An equal quantity of
lrnZd t iP with each of three differen
jer mile one ?
discount from cream of tartar, phosphate
reduced rate separately to the action <
i 24 and the for the same length of tim
Jntu midnight The relative percent
under way to Sh0Wn 38 follows:
a most eujoy- D j j
u dauce given Bread made with
?> l m
iters ana bail itoyai Lream ot larta
ggest event in I ? nA n ?
ratorlcal asso- I 100 * er *-en
imes, between
terry College Bread made Wfth
i oft on April phosphate powder: a
ig and one in
he afternoon I 681/* fer Qfr
lred Winthrop
e grounds to Bread made with /
3 to victory. * I $
ng of medals *lum powder! /
?t a reception I 67% Pjf Cent.
ithrop College
ikers, judges
ruts will give These testfc#which ?
other friends unprejudiced, rrmke plain
y to meet the to everyone : Food raise
tartar Baking Powder, is 5
i-mi be a game tible,while the alum and pi
,r?nle T " to largely retard the diges
;d by a large them.
sire to do so Undigested food is n
then take ad- js source of very man1
I rates.
*ges that will ' =
>r orutorlcal
ion will send " "*~ ???????
students to ture w'th motion, color, plot and
ative to his excltement supply legitimately.
It is a fact that the class of sa sence
of the loons that formerly appealed to the
II also be an young?and ruined them?the
e debaters to drinking places dealing in poisonwav
are von ous ('r''iks now find their profits
4" ' diminishing and their attendance
tor the con- fa]iing 0ftt thanks to the moving
pictures.
Men that are engaged in manuMOVIXtl
faoturing moving picture macliines
SI) AT I.AKT are distinctly educators. They are
doing for knowledge a work as imhave
told our portant as that which was done by
t work that the inventor and the manufacturer,
estined to do The whole task of the human
race is to get into the minds of the
i men should young and of the old tlie knowledge
Icture and its accumulated by those that have I
plays w ill be Kone before. The moving picture I
g picture. machine will do this as no other
resses will be power could do it.
'produces Uthe This we have lonB appreciated,
otion through While those ignorantly opposing
what is new opposed the moving
relopiuent of picture, refused to see its power and
ul in the hu- tried to belittle its value, one of the
motion and in editorials on moving pictures pubdeveloped
on Hshod by the Hearst newspapers
er by moving hears the heading: "The Power of
emands upon Moving Pictures; They Will Kducate,
Through the Eye, Hundreds of
e will make Millions of Children."
been painful- The rUCht use of the moving plce
and a de- lure wil1 do for the education of
children infinitely more even than
the town of ',as <>v<?r been done by printed
to, lias ' pur- hooks.
ture machine We tell men whose minds are on
the moving picture industry, wheth
Wisconsin *'r ilH aclor8? writers or moving picnow
uses the lure plays or manufacturers of male
as a regu- chines, that their work Is only beicliool
system. Binning.
littie country Every day eight millions of hu- I
re its moving "lan being attend the moving nlethe
pictures 1,1 res in the United States now.
en pleasantly That number will be increased soon
n they could ' ' *' l'ie total number of public
or a month rtt'liool children and of private
school children also in Jfhe United
men will be States. Jr
Iren in mov- 11 ^e busMfess of this
By shall have newspaper to oncourjfe the useful,
Little boys educating moving pWture work, to
i their minds ^
e life of Lin- Piles Cured InJo to 14 Days
vith one win- Your druggist wilt rMuo<\ money if VAZO
ft theater all OI.NTMHNTfailslo r#e any case of Itching,
in nutvimr Bhnd. Bleeding or rfofuiting 1'tlea in6to Mdaya.
i The first application^ ves Kase and Kest. 50c.
r brains w ith I If You Valuo^
rain to w'ork. You will equip yklir^^
real imaiffiiu- . . . , "IwHr #v
magi.,alien. reading table with a X*
that fncohol ^
moviftg pic Authorities agree that a good ki
nm\fUtroH. reading. The Rayo is the best oi
lrest cure for of scientific study. It gives a sti
sores, In flam- Made of solid brass, nickel plate
diseases is moving chimney or shade. Kas;
ve. In four H 7 _
iCair, />* tI A ' n?'
^?UIUt Ul X I O- I ni i/IHIffl
? could hard- STANDARD C
i every home. M ? . (incorporated
,, ? , ... . Newark, N. J.
nded by LanItandard
Drug HHRT^SB^PSSBflHHIHHRI
*
arative I
ibility
>d v
nt Baking Powders
borate Chemical Tests:
bread (biscuit) was mide Wf
t kinds of baking powder?
t, and alum?and submitted
)f the digestive fluid, each
le.
age 01 me iuou uigebicu u> t
t PoWder:
t flhgested |
it. Digested \
Digested |
ire absolutely reliable and
a fact of great importance
:d with Royal, a cream of
shown to be entirely digeshosphate
powders are found
tion of the food made from
M
lot only wasted food, but it
y bodily' ailments.
give it editorial endorsement as we
have always done, and b> constant
special attention at the hands of
experts to secure for it tho place
that it deserves in the public estimation,
us an education, an amusement
and a natural, legitimate and
wholesome stimulant to the brain
of the human race.
For ages men nad the animals
before them received impressions
through the eye. The eye tells
more to the brain in a second than
any man's tongue or book can tell
in an hour.
The moving picture tells its story
direct to the eye. It is the great
and direct educator.
Hoards of education should use
it; municipalities, instead of bainmering
it, should enccfuragc it.
Strong censorship should discourage
that which is harmful; strict W.V
supervision should make moving ^
picture resorts safe?but no harrassing
restrictions.
To hamper the development ot
I Iwi liUW'i ti ir niet nrn 4 a no m n nU /. f n
?i?\ iitv < n>h {/iw u i u ao no ui uvu Ml a
crime as It was In the old days to
hamper the development of the
printing press.?New York American.
Left Money to County That Cared
for Hint.
Joseph R. Jackson, aged 43 and
a cripple, died here today very suddenly.
A will was found in which
he left his property, valued at
$3,000, to Sedwlck county.
Ten years ago the county took
care of him and he states in his will
that he wants to pay the debt with
compound interest.
An effort is being made to locate
Jackson's relatives, as Probate
Judge McCanless says the county
cannot tnkn th? nutnin Trmni/n
-- -w vuv*%vv A
Capital. ,y
/
"My little sou had a very severe
cold. I was recommended to try
Chamborlain's Cough Remedy, and
before a small bottle was finished
he was as well as evor," write Mrs.
H. Silks,* 20 Dowling Street, Sydney,
Australia, This remedy is for sale
by all dealers.
f
Your Eyesight f.
Lamp
erosene oil lamp is the best for
1 lamp made, the result of years
eady white light, clear, mellow,
d. Can be lighted without re/
to clean and re wick. vi.*.
Everywhere
)IL COMPANY
a Now Jartar I
Bahiaara, MA
mmmmmsmmmm
<
K h* dm i