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' 2 AMERICAN HOUSEWIFE m *Mrn rnn u/aotimi DLMiYicu run iihoiiih A. M. Dubin Makes Suggestio to Meat Packers. IN SESSION IN CHICAGC Declares It the Duty of (*overnniei to Stock I .amis of West and Put Army in Control. Chicago. Sept. 24.?It Is the du of the United States to stock its go eminent lands in the West with ca tie, put the army, especially tl cavalry, to work as cowboys handle the animals, supply the pac ers with this beef at cost so that tl price would be lowered to the pe pie and a threatened meat famii due in six or eight years averted, the opinion of A. M. Dubin of Nc York, a delegate to the Amerlcj Meat Packers' Association. "My suggestion is perfectly sli pie," said Mr. Dubin. "The gover ment land in the West could be mai Into great pastures, where countle cattle could be raised to relieve tl present high cost of meat and ave the famine that surely is comii otherwise. "Unless some such action is taki there will be no meat on the tabl of American workingmen in the ne decade. The government has 1 higher obligation than to relieve tl situation, which every day is becoi ing more serious. The land so stoc ed could supply the army with me first then the rest could be sent the packers at cost and the consul er could get it with the mere pri of dressing added. The lower pri would be astonishing. This acti< or something just as effcacious nui be done at once." The American housewife was tak to task for wasting meat. A four part of all the meat killed for t table Is wasted. Poor families refu to be content with chuck and roui steaks, despite the fact that tho outs can be made delicious by cc root cooking and the groat Amorlci family of moat paters falls to pra tlce proper economy in Its meat dl< said John T. Russell, president of t Master Butchers' Association America. He added the housewi must do her part If the high prlc of meats are to he brought down even prevented from going up. The packers voted to spend $101 000 a year for five years to stlmula the cattle raising Industry. BRV.W'S IVCOMK. Does Not Think Public Voeds Know II ow lie Spends Money. Washington. Rent. 24.?Recreta Rryan snvs he does not mind dl cussing his sources of Income. 1> he thinks it is going a little too f to ask him to make a public detalli account of his private expenditure A Rpeecli by Renator Martine. dofen Inc the socretarv's Chautauqua 1c tures, in which the senator said W Bryan was supporting mission st dents in .Tannn. brought many 1 quiries yesterday. The secretary issued this stat ment: "We are not educating nnv bovs Janan. A Japanese student ilvi with tis for about five vears hut Re ator Martlne's remarks probably r frr to students whom we have assls ed in other narts of Asia, hut T c not consider it necessary to dlscu the matter. 1 have discussed tl sources of mv income. hut T am iu yet convinced that the nubile r quires me to discuss each contribi tlon which I see fit to make to worthy cause. "T may add that 1 answer the< questions with reluctance and wit the feeling that newspapers repri "" " II" il>K IIH' < | II*tions fool more curiosity than tl general public docs in my private a fairs." Pj&Jthful Old "I'ncles" and "Man " mies." "Presbyterian Standard. We always have a soft, place in o? heart for the down-trodden and tl "humble, and espeoially for ex-slave who are associated with the hapt xiaj'3 of childhood. We all remer ber their faithfulness in the Civ War, their sympathy and love in 01 childhood, and their loyalty to tl old master when the fortunes of wi were against him. For these reasoi it always warms our heart whenev any appreciation of these falthf old uncles and mammies is shown 1 the white race. We honor the pe pie of the town of Rockingham ai the county of Richmond, North Oat linn, held a reunion of former Slav and served them a most sumf 10 dinned. Four hundred or mt.e them walked in a procession soi with hair whitened hv age and stc feeble, while their white enterta era vied with each other in payi them every attention. It was an < casion that spoke volumes for ea race, and proved what we have ways said, that the relation betwf white and colored In this state if happy one. Sure to Miss. Philadelphia Ledger. An Irishman, who with his w is employed on a truck farm in N Jersey, recently found himself ii bad predicament when, in attempt to evade the onslaughts of a sav dog, assistance came in the shape his wife. When the woman came up the ' had fastened his teeth in the call her husband's leg and was hold on for dear life. Seizing a stone the road, the Irishman's wife about to hurl it, when the huchS with wonderful presence of m shouted: "Mary! Mary! Don't throw stono at the dog! Throw it at n THE I PRESENT RAY SONGS. f~ Some of Them Are Not Idke Mother Sl'swl to King. _ The following is taken from the monthly bulletin of the Oregon Social Hygiene Society, written by a physician: n The decadence of our times in ol music, as illustrated in our popular songs in the last three-quarters of a 01 century, is certainly appalling. The songs of 75 years ago, "Old Tom 0 ). Moore," "Believe Me," "Annie h I l.,aurie, uonnie aweei ?uu "The Last Hose of Summer," were nt largely supplanted at the time of the h Civil War by popular songs set to n martial tunes and were sung by all p a generation ago. However, as time t decimated the ranks of those who had e ; served in the army and as the sweet- 8( hearts of the soldiers became the y | " grandmothers of the present genera- J, .'* tlon, these songs were largely sup- f( ,? planted by light sentimental songs. c such as "Hen Bolt" and "White ^ ,,k Wings," and we all gave a shudder ?~ when "Pretty Annie Rooney," togeth!w er with "Sally in Our Alley," swept 8 ovei the country like wild fire. It l was said that we were degenerating 1,1 in our tastes, but now the worst of c the cheap and tawdry sentimental n" songs of ten years ago are nothing 8 compared to the abominable, demor' altzing and almost obscene songs of s ,s8 the present day, ground out from ' phonographs, bellowed in vaudeville. { r shouted on excursions and whistled by newsboys. e Our music stores and song shops l>n fill their windows with popular songs, r the vileness of the title page only ji x equalled by the disgraceful chorus on "j0 the inside. "Everybody's Doing It" "s probably was to try out public opinion. Evidently public opinion ap- c1 _ " proved of it, for it was followed by t l1' "Mabel, How Do You Manage to Do 1 it on $12 a Week?" "Everybody f T1" Loves a Chicken," and so on, ad nau- \ ce seam. What sort of education in c oe chivalry is this? Who is Mabel? ? nn Who are the chickens? The vile pic- i lst tares of lecherous old reprobates, \ leering at the pretty-faced and trim- i ''n gowned young women en the title i 1,1 page of a so-called popular song dis- v played over the land is not an en- r couraglng sign of progress In the \ II campaign against a double standard e se of morality." i ,r" "I have tried out some questioning j III of hoys on this line," said the gen- > tlemen handing in the article, "and i * without exception have found that y p the suggestions and pictures called r ?" up by many of the songs sung every- s where are of the very worst sort? v os simply rotten morally and every way. r or And yet?they are the "popular \ songs" of the day. Aside from the * moral issue Involved, from an aesthe,r> tic standpoint it is fearful to see the way in which this cheap, tawdry and j i lifeless stuff passes for "Music." We j are in need of a renaissance to bring r us out of these dark ages of "popu- ! I lar music." n to t KEEP BOY ON FARM, Eil S GOV. COX'S APPEAL ! Ut I ' I e ' j Ohio's Chief Executive S?n?s Xo lieu- ^ ,s son Country I.ife Should Not ^ d- be Entertaining. Piano, 111., Sept. 24.?"Keep the p. boy on the farm and restore com- J n- munlty life in the country." Ij This was the message brought to f r>" the twenty-third annual Farmers' 1 In National Congress by Governor Cox J1 *d Iof Ohio at the opening session of the a n" [congress here yesterday. Governor d [ Dunne of Illinois endorsed the mes- t I sage. All the speakers of the after- h noon talked on the high cost of Uv- d ing and all agreed that it centered In a u> the emigration of the country boy ii I from the farm to the city. p* I "To keep the boy on the farm Is our problem. It Is a problem we ' havo sienallv failed to solve." Gov-I^ omor Cox said. "Mv solution of It 1 ,r> is smaller farina. They should be ! d more farmer owners working flieir own land instead of hie proprietors ei s" owning large trarts worked by ten- Cl ants or overseers." Governor Cox said he saw no rea- w son why life in the country should a not he made entertaining. "Every h i- township should have a combination c community house and high school. T "They should have Iyceums there, w moving pictures and the like. A ir strong sense of community life o should he developed." a s. Charles T. Sanford. president of a y the congress, discussed the "Great c n* Margin of Expense TTiat is Found t " Somewhere Between the Producer v ir and Consumer and Adds to the High t 1? Cost of Living." t nr c RESULTS TELL ul t hy _____ { o- f nd j There Can be No Donht About the ( Results in lain caster. Results tell the tale, of < Tie All doubt is removed. 1 ps In- The testimony or a nuncusit'i i ok citizen r>cich Tan be easily investigated. <11" if>n What better proof can be had? ' a W. S. Langley, contractor and builder, Elm St., Lancaster, S. C\, says: "My back ached intensely and my kidneys were disordered. The kidney secretions passed Irregularly if(> and were unnatural. I got a supply , ! of Doan's Kidney Pills from Craw. ford Bros.' Drug Store and it did not , take them long to relieve me. My aee k'('ney8 are now 'n a normal condl, tlon. The pains and aches have left me." dog "When Your Ilack is Lame?Remember the Name." Don't simply . 1? ask for a klihiey remedy?ask <llswas tinctly for Doan's Kidney l'llla, the >n(l. same that Mr. Langley had?the Ind. remedy hacked by home testimony. 50c at all stores. Foster-Milbum Co., ie!" Props, Buffalo, N. Y. LANCASTER NEWS, SEP' A Deb ev. George D. Harmon, in Ashe- i boro (N. C.) Courier. tJ "Provide things honest in the sight r all men." r?wR no man anything, but to love ne another." "If any man provide not for his wn, and especially those of his own ouse, he hath denied the faith, and i worse than an Infidel." "Debt, Dirt aud the Devil"?These | ave wrought untold desolation to i lillions?desolation and misery, hysi^al, financial and moral. I Paul believed in debt-paying hon8ty. Perhaps this is the reason ome rascals did not like him. When ou hear some cheap fellow deounclng the preacher. Just ask that ellow whether he has paid for the lothes which covers his worthless >ack. SIX THINGS DEBT WILL DO. It will shorten an honest man's Ife. It will destroy an honest man's ourage. It will destroy an honest man's elf-respect. It will make a man a helpless lave. It will diminish a man's chances or success. It will destroy a man's good in Ounce. "Owe no man anything," is a good ule. You will find bread and peace ind honor therein. THE DEBT DODGER. The man who will dodge an honest lebt is a rascal, and ought to be on he cliaingang making good roads for lonest men to ride on. I have proound sympathy for the honest man ! vho Is trying to pay his debts but annot because of misfortune. It tome times happens that even honest nent cannot pay their debts; but vhen an honest man is doing his >est the world will lean toward nercy. But some who claim to be mabie to pay are rascals?they have ?ot made an honest effort. The man vho Is known to be honest can genTally get help in time of need. There - ?"ntt-inir had wrong with the ? nuiurvu...^ roung man who lias lived several ears In a town if he can't Ret a little lelp when In need. It means that he ias been a "dead-beat," of It may nean that he Is a red-beat from lucking too much "booze." The lonest, sober. hard-working young nan can generally find some man , vho will give him help In need. A MAN MUST PROVIDE. I For the physical needs of his fam-1 lv?bread. For the mental needs of lis family?education. For the noral needs of his family?religion. Jread, education and religion?our leeds o nearth and in heaven. For hese every good man will strive. Your Fath?r knowetli that ye have leed of these things." He has taught is to work and pray for daily bread, i v man is bound to provide bread, duration and religious training for lis family. 1UT HE MUST PROVIDE HONESTY. Dishonesty Is worse than poverty, i Mshonesty is worse than ignorance. I Mshonesty makes religion impossiile. One of the most distressing I acts the preacher has to face is this: I 'here are many children brought up n such an atmosphere of deception, J alsehood and dishonesty that it is ' lmost impossible to teach such chil- I ren the essential and eternal dis- I inction between truth and false- j ood, honesty and rascality. All i ishonest persons are liars at heart; j nd they will lie in word as well as . i deed. DEBTS ARE RASCALITY. Not many persons start out in life ith the intention of being dishonest, he radical fault is that they have no *" tioiiest at I pterinInert purpose iw ny cost. Men often become dishon- ' at almost unconsciously. In many ases the process is about as follows: i Pride?They are too proud to live J ithin their income. They must live 1 nd dress like some other dough- 1 ead. The person who wears fine I lothes not paid for is dishonest. 'hat person lacks common sense as ' ell as common honesty. Extravagance?The first-born child ! f pride. Some persons are actually shamed to let it be known that they re poor and that they most practice lose economy in order to live within heir means. These persons make a ain display in order to deceive? hey are extravagant, to make others telieve that they are in easy finanial circumstances. An honor to the nen and women who are not asliam;d of honest poverty and who have .he courage to live within their inlome, while others strut in borrowed eathers or ride in automobiles ainMld for. NEEDLESS DEBT. Debt is often the beginning of rascality. The man who goes in debt Tor things he could do without is on the borderland of rascality. Debts r>asy made are hard to pay. If you want to keep yourself good, don't use your credit too often. Better let your credit rust out than wear out. I want you to remember that the mile-posts on the road to hell are: Pride, extravagance, needless debt. If your religion has not made you as honest as a gold dollar, It will not keep you out of hell. HONESTY AND POVERTY. Every thinking man knows thai the commercial prosperity and security of the state depends more upon the honesty of her citizens than Caught a Bad Cqld. "Last winter my son caught a verj bad cold and the way he coughed wai something dreadful," writes Mrs Sarah E. Duncan, of Tipton, Iowa "We thought sure he was going lnt< consumption. We bought Just on< bottle of Chamberlains Cough Rem edy and that one bottle stopped hi: cough and cured his cold complete ly." For sale by all dealers. % fEMBER 26, 1913. Ing Honesty II upon any other one thing. It is to the highest interest of the business ^ ?*??* o npomlnm or* Hoht. ? Ul IU W |/U V a p* VU1IU>U v.. paying honesty. Self-interest ought to influence business men to stand by 1 ' the Bible, the church upon genuine 1 honesty as does the Bible. No other organization promotes honesty as does the church. And the only sure cure for rascality is religion. HOW TO KEEP OUT OF DEBT. ya Work regularly. Live within your income. Keep away from places of toi amusement. Do the best work pos- toi slble. Remember God helps those Wi who try, and keep on trying. One of the most successful men 1 have ever known had to sell out every fall to pay his debts. He worked hard, P" trusted in God and finally became a great financial success, and his sue- ? cess did not destroy his sympathy for the poor. THE HONEST MAN WHO CANT PAY. What .uust be done for the honest man who cannot pay? Do as God does?forgive him and say, Brother go and sin no more. Don't kick the man that's down. Give him your hand, and if possible help him on his feet again. God has given you many chances. Give the honest brother another chance. "And be ye kind one to another, tender-hearted, forgiving one another, even as God for Christ's sake hath forgiven you." THE GREATEST DEBT. Our sins against God, Jesus paid the debt we owe, by His death on the cross. No man can possibly owe us j as much as we owe God. Jesus paid | it all. We must show our gratitude I to God by being kind to one another. With what measures we give it shall I be measured back to us. You may | die a pauper and reach heaven I through the atonement made by 1 Christ. Do not think too much about other people's debts, but think much about the debt of love and faith and worship you owe to God. Set your heart upon heavenly things. Soon we must all stand before the Judge of all the earth. All I wrongs will then be righted. You J,lc may find It hard to make an honest *er living, but you will be rich In heaven. "? If you starve trying to make an hon- wa est living, you will reach there soon- ?*I er. Be honest at any cost. *'R' There will be no rascals in era heaven. ?n ev? Wisdom. Salisbury Post. vp, What Is it? am ?Is it learning? x ine ?Is it education? * ha^ ?Is it worldly knowledge? the ?It is to be had for the buying? de< ?No, wisdom come from right or| thinking. do, ?It is the absent of cant, bitter- He ness and hatred. j ?It is the conscious consideration tjlf of each thought and action. stT ?A clear, clean mind, clear saj llwti, trill ailft ;1 (ilonrlv HpflllPli tllail i ! tuwu^i.v u"w ^,v"* ? I HO of action take one wisdomward. , ?Contract this plan with that of ' some of your slipshod acquaintances who Ret into and out of all sorts of j' foolish difficulties a dozen or more jlft times a day. cel cia Diarrhoea Quickly Cored. ?i,, "1 was taken with diarrhoea and as Mr. Yorks, the merchant here, per- ly Buaded me to try a bottle of Cham- "ii berlaln's Colic, Cholera and Dlar- cai rhoea Remedy. After taking one tin dose of it I was cured. It also cured "si others that I gave it to." writes M. th< E. Qebhart, Oriole, Pa. That Is not wc at all unusual. An ordinary attack va of diarrhoea can almost Invariably be As cured by one or two does of this he remedy. For sale by all dealers. pe A/i Eight=1 *? ?? BftowN SHccriNa*?"D??i 'tin! ?'ik ? 6par\?nburg,s Peaelee-deulbert Oo.i Loulevllle, 1|> OmtliMni* After ooapletlng our rllU| Ot., v* xp?rli?nt*() with too* half do Of point by dividing our village up in ben houaee eeob and painting eaoh tan brand. On one eeotioo of ten houae and Oil.the other five eeotione *e uee ueed in thie eeotion.and oortaidarad to braada. ' After eight yeare re find t lege* oorered with "MA0TXO PAIWT" are tion and atood the teat batter than an van Inoluding Lead and pil Will any houeee were all of the aana erphlteotu with ldng leaf yellow pine of the aana sane arpoaura to the awi| that la, non partially proteotad by ehada treee, bu We are wall pleaaed with th "KASTIO PAXWT* and oah heartily reooow i one who la a buyer. Youre tr paoolkt wajt; LcU 9 ; > WHENEVER YOU NEED A GENERAL TfllllC - T be Old Standard Grove's Tasteless cl /aluable as a General Tonic because i Drives Out Malaria, Enriches the Bl< the Whole System. For Grown Peo] u know what you arc taking when you take Gr< the formula is printed on every label showing tha lie properties of QUININE and IRON. It is as ai lie and is in Tasteless Form. It has no equal for ?akness, general debility and loss of appetite. Gi >thers and Pale, Sickly Children. Removes Bi ilieves nervous depression and low spirits. Arous rifies the blood. A True Tonic and Sure Appetizer. > family should be without it. Guaranteed by your 1 THE YOUNG IDEA. cent Amer the demim The small boyB' grief . 1 Is most Intense. Llric h * * Fain would he try Vi. t? t To get him hence. VJ But o'er him fate . ^ The scoring wins; X?nA Dread words he hears "School begins." ?-?*? The teacher worn by *\1 To frazzled nerves, ?ro?n?f From duty near, K fi Almost she swerves, * ?n For to her ears Amirl an Prophetic dins *?. do "?J Ring In those words ?i Of "School begins." creation c men s drei But mothers smile *be maint With blest relief, cency and And little dogs ? Shed all their grief While spinsters tried lake nils Hy youthful sins, * *,lJ Join gladsome cry . Of "School begins." A a?*?? ?Baltimore American. y An hour smile Dress and Decency. A notse m :hmond Times-Dispatch. Women who will not regard the A crowd Igment of a poor journalist in mat- with s of apparel will respect, if they A bunch c not approve, the opinions of Ed- worsl rd Bok on decency and dress, as a game c jressed in the current ssue of Coir's Weekly, for Mr. Bok, our read will remember, is an authority such things, and when he speaks s,pr^n0kf jhl( >n the New York modists give partner of' ti w] ing bualncan Stat* afore* This time Mr. Bok is speaking in a the *nm of y positive fashion. He Is mad, curod"^ th! i writes like it. Surveying feminfasliion, he has concluded, as sworn to ire thousands of us, that some of presence, thi ? modes are indecent, rankly in- Seal, out. He has discovered, too, the gin of these radical costumes, and acta" direct*} ?s not hesitate to tell the facts, face* of th says of Parisian fashions: **** F Each year the tendency to lower Sold by a] > standards has become more Tako Uaii ongly marked. But it must be <1 to the credit of the French gen- j woman that these "styles" are Jj3JlCa?S Ither indorsed nor worn by her. Schedule e scorns them with contempt. They ? the creations of the disordered nds of French dress-makers, who Lv. Lane; ve lost all sense of art and do- kv. Fort icy, have become pure commer- Lv. <Rlch lists, and who, laughing in their Ar. Ches eves at the American women, are, one of the greatest of them recent- Lv. Chei said, seeing how far they can go Lv. Rich i making fools of the Ameri- Lv. Base a women." No Frenchwoman of Lv. Fort s slightest refinement wears these Ar. Lan< tyles;" they are the hallmark of Connei r women of the French under- era, Se rid. that frequent the Paris boule- Northwet rds and the French race courses. Fort I Mme Sarah Bernhardt said upon Line Rai r last visit to America, it was a Lancaf rfect surprise to her to see a deear Competi\ F\ MASH | Won out Paint in Lo .O.say lotfay lOIt TIE Pacolet Mf; are large paint in selecting th< at Holland, In order to determi sr-* ? ? <?< ?f time. the: ?ith <iwror?nt for an eight-year leading brands. R fj? MASTIC PAIN1 d paints Mostly b* tbs Is id lax Profit by the Expei hit th? tin ootoondl Don't xperirnent I Of ths othsrs, , , . r w further tbftt tb# don t nave to rli and Has been the grids,hiring f ? of th#a wars over forty years. it fully sspossd. ? rssuits of tin Mastic Paint nev? nd sisss,to my assures the best p nnfe^rl for AKaol I P.^aslee-Gaulbert < taoturibo oo. I we can recommeni I FREE ?" J color ct icaster Hardw; LANCASTER, S. C. ME GROVE'S bill Tonic is Equally t Acts on the Liver, >od and builds up pie and Children. jve's Tasteless chill Tonic t it contains the well known trong as the strongest bitter Malaria, Chills and Fever, ives life and vigor to Nursing liousness without purging, es the liver to action and A Complete Strengthened Druggist. We mean it. 50c. lean woman dresBed like onde of Paris, very plain talk, so plain, hat we should hesitate to :cept as the opinion of an but that It is a true indictilisand French visitors will II are of one opinion and y amazed that the splendid d of this country should e hoodwinked to indecency ng costumers. offers as a remedy for the sgraceful fashions a vogue can styles designed for women. Upon this point presume to criticise him. ler they be of our own >r not, new styles of wo?s must be forthcoming for enance of American deAmerican morals. s Home ami Try It Over on I ir Washing Machine. i 4 ?" ?U lnlaat nJHlUILirS, till me lavvov '' \ of gossip, flattery?and 1 ke many magpies in a tree; This is a tea. /J of fellows half consumed thirst; { >f stories?who can tell the . t?? if poker till the rising sun, And this is fun! f >. City of Toledo. Lucas County. at. I 'honey makes oath that bo Is senior j 10 Arm of F. J. Cheney A Co.. do- " In the City of Toledo, County and t| aid, and thnt oald Arm will pay ONE iniNDRKI) DOLLARS for ory case of Catarrh that cannot be e use of llall'a Catarrh Cure. FRANK J. CHENEY, before me and subscribed In my a Oth day of December,' A. D., lSStL A. W. ( LEASON, ' Notary Fubllc. arrh Cure la taken Internally and - upon the blood and mucoua aure system. Seud for testimonials, J. CHENEY & CO., Toledo. O. 11 DruKKlsts, 75c. J i's Family Fills for constipation. I ter & Chester Ry. Co. In Effect March 3rd, 1912. Eastern Time. WESTBOUND. aster 6:00a?3:36p Lawn 6:30a?4:08p burg 6:66a?4:43p ter 7:30a?6:20p EASTBOUND. iter 9:30a?6:46p burg 10:2 0a?7:2 6p omvllle 10:3 0a?7:3 6p Lawn 11:00a?7:60p :aster 11:3 0a?8:16p :tlons?Chester with Southaboard and Carolina ft Dnilntntrn )iuiu naunujn, jawn, with Seaboard Air lway. jter, with Southern Railway. A. P. McLURE, Supt. tive Test [C PAINT over all other ngest Endurance g. Co., of Spartanburg, S. C, :-usera and are very careful e best paint money can buy. ne which paint would stand y painted some sixty bouses endurance test, using the lead this letter, it proves that * stood the test that tells, rience of People Who Know! with unknown Paint?you astic Paint is a certainty, standard of exceuence for sr varies in quality, it always ossible results. It is guar ute runty by ita maker?, Co., of Louisville, Ky., and d it highly to our customers. r beautifully illustrated book s and How To Paint Them," also ird showing 45 color combinations. are Co. jj o -V />JK> ifJL.