The Lancaster news. (Lancaster, S.C.) 1905-current, July 08, 1913, Page 7, Image 7

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ASSUREJURE1|LKh United Nurseries of Philadelphia Win Purity Fight. hu toi Wom?n Members of Board of Mam at agora Carry Point?Violations of ,D| Regulations for Benefit of esi didici nepwnoa. | sa Philadelphia.?Through the efforts Qv^ Of the Philadelphia Association of ca Day Nurseries, a reform in the handHng of tho milk supply of the city has been brought about and condl- tj.( tlons which chiefly affect the babies ])( of the poor have been greatly rerne- . ?ed. a? *The association, made up of woman j representatives of the board of man- " agers of twenty-two day nurseries, has procured the enforcement of an ordl- 8 nance prohibiting the sale of "dipped ? milk," except in shops where eggs, to, butter and bread are sold. Following the baby-saving show of ? last spring, and still keeping in mind lessons of the milk show of the prev- p0 Sous year, members of the association, ^ determined to safeguard as far as mi they could the lives of the babies, entrusted to the care of their nurseries ' 0 and started a systematic investigation " of mllkshops in the neighborhood of ?n the nurseries. !"0< The Infant mortality committee u which undertook the investigation ap- ^ plied to leading physicians who have had the work of baby-saving under their direction and procured the services of an investigator who has hnH " " All experience In public health work. Visits were made to several hundred shops In the neighborhoods of ? the day nurseries. The shops wore viewed from every angle that would make them places where It would bo prejudicial to the child health to have Its milk supply stored. The source of | supply, the condition of refrigerating ^ facilities, occupancy of the house and ^ the methods employed In handling ^ were gone Into and a card Index was , made of all places visited. ,* ^Tbe research showed many flagrant F? violations of the milk regulations of cL the department of health. All sorts of j* menacing conditions were discovered. One of the chief causes of complaint was found to be the cigar and candy shops In which milk was sold lr bulk. 4 In many of these no attempt was made to keep the milk at an even ^ temperature, or to ward off the flies ^ which Infested the plaoes. The milk f was carelessly handled and dipped out y. with any sort of a dipper and In any sort of a way. i_ Reports of these conditions were Instantly made to the bureau of health. | which acted upon them In two cases. tjc revoking licenses, and In every In- I stance prohibiting the sale of dipped ^ or loose milk In any stores except those which handle bread, eggs or tb butter and which are qualified to give te| proper care. ab The object of the association la to pr safeguard, by concerted effort, the Ha children who are entrusted to various (ef nurseries and to study their home en- fQ| Ttronment and the conditions which affect their health. ou WORKS FOR PURE SODA WATER wl Mrs. Julian Heath Haads Delegation That Visits Shops to 8top tha 86 S?.la of "Poison." an New York.?"We are going after ,lr the soda water fountains and see to tt that customers are no longer sold aH poison to drink," declared Mrs. Julian I Heath, national president of the Housewives' league J^coompanlcd by a band of fellow | members she entered sevoral soda water emporiums on the upper west side and put the clerks through an Inquisition. After admitting that the or sirups. Ingredients and sanitary ar rangnments were excellent, she pro- m ceeded to the lower east side. In several places they found a drink which. Mrs Heath declared, was artl- | " flcially colored and nothing short of a w L mixture of alcohol and sugar. j ^ dc 11? Lfiecce fiidi nw DncTtro 1 .. ML. i\IVMLd Ulllk. UI1 I UO 1 1-11 H ; af California Man Makea Ardent Love to hi Picture of Laaa on BUI pi Board. of K' Oakland. ?A monomania for pretty m poster girls caused the arrest of Frank p< Caatells by Patrolman Bernard Our ran er at Sixteenth and Cypress streets. ai Castells was observed by Outran hi making ardent lore to a bright-eyed young woman pasted on a board. The as man stooped and klaaed the lltho- at graph on the Hps and as Curran ap- ro proached kissed it again Curran grasped Caatells by the si shoulder. He broke away and began tearing the poster from the board. nc "What are you doing?" the policeman asked "Come along with me " at "But let me take her along." Cae- w itella pleaded "I lore her and I want tl] kar." Caa telle In said to have appropriate ai d many poatera of beautiful women ab fc the past. The billboard com pan lee kad been complaining to the police na ! that their adrerttaenianta were being tern down and a watch waa aet for in tea vandnt. jr< bearing Death, Men C?ta Off Foot. jfrjin Yan, N. Y.?Fearing that he j gl -vtmo aie rrom gangrene. which derol- wi ?PM tn his big too, Isaac rtMiWf at | MM ft?venty-flre, amputated hi* foot th ?* pocket knife. ? TH E GOT THE MACHINE | y ELIZABETH SHEAR. | "Gene Filers hu a new automobile," C Id Harry Jungles. He had stopped i trotter at the gate to the Trampi farm for the very good reason that tho gate Pearl Trampton was waltr g for the mall man. "Has he?" Inquired Pearl with Inter L Then quite casually she addressed ? fence noat "I ?hnnM now?" Id she, "marry a man who didn't rn an automobile. Why. I wouldn't re if it were a wheelbarrow?Just so j was an automobile." (J "Giddap!" said Harry Jungles to his >tter. Arriving at the town of Three ^ nes, ho told the hardware man who ^ d been pestering him for a month ^ out the mare that ho could have ^ r for the price he offered. "Going to buy a car?" asked the satled hardware man when he had paid wn the money. "Everybody seems g be getting 'cm nowadays!" "I want to buy some thing," Harry Id him, briefly. That was one thing ^ out Harry Jungles. He had down to rfectlon the art of not hearing what n ople said to him, thereby saving ich time in which to think. If Poarl Trampton passed a good ^ al of time the next ten dayB waiting 1 thft mull hnr 11 Hlrl /lUftivK ? -- ...w ?v ???? " ""j a e but her mother, who remarked on ^ ouir undented and chlckene unfed, t to no avatL r When a young woman pnta on a t ?sli frock every day and troubles to | her hair the new way and nobody mes to view tho dazzling results expt an aged mail carrier with a wife c d six children it is likely to wear r nerves ragged as a natural reac- a o "8he 8vared Helplessly." ? >n. Harry Jungles was duo to get a 1 rtlcularly acid reception when ho f d apear. ' Long before hla head appeared orer * e slight ridge In the road Pearl lis- , '< tied In amazement to the remark- j 1 In phiiffffln? annnd that wau an. ' oachlng. When she saw Harry she t down suddenly. She stared helpisly when he stopped, with some efrt, before her. "How do?" Harry said, casually. He waa seated somewhat procarlisly In the largest wheelbarrow farl had ever seen, with two extra reels under it, a motor attached to e rear and a clever amateur steering ar In front. Never would she have ought that a human being In such absurd position could look so en ely at ease., "Want anything in town?" Harry ked. When Pearl managed to gasp out a lnt "No" he grabbed a handle and oked It, banged his foot on a Talve id shook the appartus In front of him ircely, whereupon the wheelbarrow nged, snorted and trundled off. "And he's actually going to appear l the streets of Three Pines In that lng!" she murmured in agony. "Oh, y! What have I done?" Naturally she did not know that " arry Jungles on reaching the turn >low the Trampton farm headed his j heelbarrow around that section of nd and back home. ^ fter that he came to see Pearl every iv. nlwnvs in hie unlnue motor car. e never mentioned It and Pearl was raid to after that first appearance of a when he had Ignored It so remotely. But she suffered at the hands her family, who said It was a dlsace to the community and that she ust make Harry Jungles stop It. sari could have done this easily ' toagh by telling him not to call, hot >parently the Idea never occurred to ?r. "Want to go for a ride?" Harry iked Anally one bright day when he opped at the mall box. "There's om for two!" "No, I don't 1" she answered with ' ifrtt "Will you marry met" he Inquired kit In nreclselv the same tone. Thereupon Pearl burst Into tears J,1 id Harry descended from the barrow Ith so much speed that the machine pped over and was fatally wrecked. "Wh-wh-why do you ride In that r-awful thing f sobbed Peart on hla toulder. "Had to," Harry told her. "You Jd?" "You never asked roe I" flushed she dignantly, "I d-ldn't care whether ... tsmA aim nM tnmitlillA or not. " >oeel Why did you have to?" "Because," said the practical Junes, "the new automobile I've ordered on't bo delivered for another month c id I couldn't let Oene Filers get all a at start of me after what you said." 1 -Chicago Dally News. (Copyright by Dally 8tory Pub. Co.) ? LE LANCASTER NF.WS..1 iust smJIsea ftinamen Condemned to Live on Board Ship. Voo Chow Prevented From Landing Either In America or China by the Authorities of the Respective Countries. New York.?Woo Chow sailed from Ilia port on board the steamer Amria, bound for Singapore. If Woo an convince the Singapore authorles that his eight-inch stub or braided air is a pigtail, he may be allowed 3 land and see his wife in Canton, r not, he will be condemned to sail lie seas some more?he has been on le water continuously for fifteen ears?until he can establish his idenIty as a Chinaman or smuggle himelf into America. Woo Chow is a man without a counry. Woo Is neither oriental nor occiental. He has been excluded from lie United States and from China for fteen years. This is how it has hapened: Woo Chow had heard much of imerlca, the promised land, in his ome In Canton, when he attended an Linerican missionary school. His ilood was stirred by the tales of oportunity. Fifteen years ago Woo left his naive home and went to Singapore, paving behind a wife, and a father nd mother, and two children. For two years he worked on the llngapore river front, until one day , ship, sailing for America, was wtthut a crew. The captain picked up a rew along the water front. Among there he picked up Woo. Throughout the long voyage Woo iroved his fidelity. Being the only Mongolian on board ho had to do the rork of all the white men. but he lever complained At last the ship arrived in New fork. As the sky line of Manhattan sland loomed up Woo's heart beat aster for he felt that at last his Ireams were to bo roalltod. Even In hose days New York's sky line was i marvelous contrast to the low-lying md fllthv hurhnp of Sln?innro But Woo Chow could not land. He ran a Chinaman and the Chinese se:lualon act barred him out. Greatly saddened. Woo returned to Singapore. In that town, however, he van Informed that It really was easy inough to get Into the United States, or the authorities In America only bjected to the customs of the Chltese, not to the people themselves. Again Woo ventured forth, and igaln he came to New York. This lme. when still eight days from land, le visited the ship's barber and caloled the Individual Into providing ilm with a haircut. The precious lueue was gone Woo considered ilmself no longer a Chinaman, but to nake assurance doubly sure. Woo >ought a belt and a pair of western rousers and tucked In his shirt. At ast, he thought he would be admitted. Again he was doomed to dlsap>olntment, and again he returned to ""hlna. Rut there they would not let ilm In, for he had no pigtail. He vas not the same Woo who had left ?hlna. and the Chinese would not illow Woo's contention that he waa l native, and aa he had no passport te was excluded Of conree. If Woo tad been able to appeal to the captain vlth whom he had left China he might lave been better treated, but the oapaln had been dismissed In New fork. So Woo Chow Is condemned to sail he seas for the rest of his life, an* vhen he dies he will In all probability >e burled at sea Woo has left New York again, >ound for the far east He thinks he trill be able to convince his countrynen that he Is one of them, for he ias been allowing his hair to grow for leveral years, I0SEPH BROIDE STIRS THINGS. rhree-Year-Old Boy Win# Crowd's Plaudits as Star In 5 Acts of Near Tragedy. Chicago.?Joseph Brotde, three 'ears old. crowded five thrilling adventures Into almost as few minutes vhen he sauntered forth from his lome. 1149 West Madison street, all done. Here Is what happened before [oseph was yanked across the parenal threshold by a frightened mother: Rxpr4fes wagon wrecked by driver o Bave Joseph from serious Injury or leath; driver badly bruised East-bound car stopped by motornan with violent shaklng-up of pas lengers just as It was on top of loseph, who grinned at his feat. West-bound car. ditto, with the ad lltlonal thrill of Joseph being scooped ip by the fender. Great experience? or Joseph. Automobile, In front of which Joleph had dropped from car fender. tvnrvcts aharnlv an/1 mlsaao K? ? --?? y?*??m ??j?oov>o av/oo^/u u; in Inch. Joseph somewhat peeved at lot halting the speeder. Team of big horses knocks Joseph lown as hs stands In middle of street iewlng the lines of stalled cars to he east and west?all due to Joseph's td\ .itures. Joseph climbs to his feet mlling and walks out from under the torses. Several hundred men and women iheer Joseph as his mother rushes out ind takes him into the house. Joseph tot pleased at Annie. rULY 8, 1913. BRYAN DOES THE MARKETING TH Secretary of State Makea Rounds WI Every Morning With Baaket on Arm. Washington.?Secretary Bryan la f not too bually engaged with affairs of hei state to do the marketing for the lug Bryan household. Almost any morn- me Ing the aecretary of state may be seen Ka In a local market place with a large hir basket swinging from his left arm. J Col. Bryan Beeins to enjoy the mar- hei ketlng to the full. He elbows tho ovt crowd and apparently does not mind fea It auy more than he did when making fol his political campaign tours hi! Secretary Bryan's fondness for the sh? radish of the white variety is now gen- an erully known among marketmen and ( they try to keep on hand the kind he ser a I Pw. tor twi Bni Secretary of State Bryan. likes The other day, however, much to Col. Bryan's disappointment, his favorite vegetable was not to be had. "You know, I'm Just crazy about white radishes,' said the secretary to a woman shopping beside him. "No other kind will do." And he continued his search among the stands. FAIL IN BIG TREASURE HUNT 8hlp That Carried Women Seeking Burled $18,000,000 Returna Sorely Disappointed. San Francisco, Cal.?Failure of another expedition sent In quest of a legendary $18,000,000 treasure cache I on Cocoa Inland, In the South scan, I was recorded here when the nrltish I ateampshlp Melmoro put Into port. These fabled millions, according to a dying Bailor, were burled on Cocoa ? Inland by officials of the Peruvian church early In the last century Mrs. Barry Till and Miss Davis. English women, were told by the sailor on his death bed of his knowledge of the location of the cache and snpplled with charts. The women succeeded In Interesting British capitalists, and the Melmore was purchased for the expedition Mrs. Till and Miss Davis accompanied the party and directed the operations of the fortune hunters. After many weary months of labor with pick and shovel, the searchers gave up their quest and started home ward. The Melmore put In at Panama, where the two women and others ^ of the party left the vessel, to proceed homeward by the most direct route. Within the hast flfty years a half dozen expeditions equipped with ample funds to search for the gold believed to be burled there. In each case the incentive has been the same ?the account of some sailor to whom had been bequeathed charts showing the location of the treasure. OF LOCAL INTEREST Some People We Know, and We Will Profit by llearintr About Them. It took placo in Lancaster. Not in some faraway place. You are asked to Investigate it, I Asked to believe a citizen's word; To confirm a citizen's statement. Any article that is endorsed at home is more worthy of confidence Than one you know nothing about Endorsed by unknown people. A. W. Chance, grocer. Main St., Lancaster, S.C., says: "I got my supply of Doan's Kidney Pills at Crawford Bros.' Drug Store. They not only strengthened my kidneys, but made me feel better In every way. The benefit has lasted. I do not hesitate one moment In advising all kidney sufferers to take Doan's Kidney Pills. I am pleased ( to confirm my former public endorsement of Doan's Kidney Plls." . For sale by all dealers. Price 60 cents. Foster-Milburn Co., Buffalo, ; New York, sole agents for the United States. I Remember the name?Doan's? , and take no other Final Discharge. ( Notice Is hereby given that Mary II. Brewer, guardian of the estate of ; ( 8ara B. Brewer, minor, has this day made application unto me for a ( final discharge as such guardian; and that the 30th day of July, 1913, at 10 o'clock a. ra., at my office, has been appointed for the hearing of < said petition. I J. E. STEWMAN, Judge of Probate, Lancaster County, 8. C. July 1, 1913. 'I? IINKS BODY BAG OF GOODS fe Find* Missing Man Dead in tha Basement?8hrl#ks Brings Neighbors. <ew York.?Mistaking the body of hutiband, hanging from the cellof their small store, for a bag of rchandlse, Mrs. Herman Kramer of Bt Rutherford. N. J., searched for n until Hhe bumped Into the body, drs Kramer was awakened Just as husband left their apartments >r the store He hail been III. and ring he might harm himself, she lowed him downstairs She heard n go into the basement, and when 1 found the door locked she forced ontrame through a window letting no response to rails, she itched among boxes and barr Is tally, in attempting to reach behti ' barrel, she touched the body l! ? earns brought aid from ?>? i 1 Tiny Electric Dynamo. 'ho smallest electric dynamo In the rid was exhibited recently before French Academy of Science. So all Is this dynamo that its base uld not occupy all the Bpace on an lerican penny. The Instrument Is perfect miniature of a large mane, and Is a practical model In ev respect. It works with a hum it sounds like the buzz of a mosto. It weighs only one-flfth of an ice, and Is six-tenths of an inch ;h and long and only half an inch ck. The little dynamo can be used t only as a generator, but as a mo ', consutniyg. in this latter case, ? amperes of electric current at a >ssure of two and one-half volts. A all pocket battery, will operate it. Kille Lighi Two fine mules belonging <* i ni _i /-i a lorn, in i^nesier i_,ouniy, wei reported the loss June 30 ai amount of insurance on July If your mules were kille who would pay? MUTUAL LIVE STOC1 D. E. BOIS # Big Reduct Shelby Lar Buy your lamp entire house today low prices on Nati< the new, rugged k times as much lig] Lowest prices ever ill 26 40 If 60 ' IOC Put a National Every Socket Befc Next Light Bill. Replace wasteful efficient National? a better uualitvof 1 1 V as much of it wit! pense. Stock up < lamps now while p every empty socke cellar to attic. Er of ample light. LANCASTER H 1ARDWARE CO. * '/ '? - " - 7 Hiil Your Children of Wornu. You can change fretful, ill-tempered children into healthy, happy youngsters, by ridding them of worms. Tossing, rolling, grinding of teeth, crying out while aRleep, accompanied with intense thirst, pains iu the stomach and bowels, feverlsliness and bad breath, are symptoms that indicate worms. Kickapoo Worm Killer, a pleasant candy lozenge, expels the worms, regulates the bowels, restores your children to health and happiness. Mrs. J. A. Brisbin, of Elgin, 111., says: "I have used Kickapoo Worm Killer for years and entirely rid my children of worms I would not lie wltli. out it." Guaranteed. All druggists, or by mail. Price 2 5c. Kickapoo Indian Medicine Co . Philadelphia and St. Louis. CITATION STATIC OF SOUTH CAROLINA. County of Lancaster. By J. E. Stewman, Probate Judge. Whereas, Mrs. Jerusha A. Small has made suit to me to grant her letters of adminstratlon of the estate oi and effects of Nathaniel B. Small, deceased. These are, therefore, to cite and i admonish all and singular the kitidI red and creditors of the said deceased, that they be and appear before me, in the court of probate, to be held at Lane ister court houso, 8. C., on 15th day of July, 1913, after publication hereof, at 11 o'clock In the forenoon, to show cause, !f any tliey have, why the said administration should not be granted. Given under my hand, this 1st day <?i July, Anno Domini 1913. J. E. STEWMAN, Probate Judge. d by tning to Mr. R. H. Fudge of Lands e killed June 29. Mr. Fudge nd received check for the full - 1. d by Fire, Wind or Lightning, ft INSURANCE ASSO.. IEY, M*r., Yorkville, S. C. ion in Price Mazda rips equipment for the and get these new snal Mazda Lamps, ;ind that give three tit at the same cost, named: Watt 35c Watt 35c Watt 45c >Watt80c Mazda Lamp in >re You Pay Your 1 carbon lamps with ^azda lamps and get light and three times lout additional exjn National Mazda rices are down. Fill t in the house, from ijoy the hospitality