The Lancaster news. (Lancaster, S.C.) 1905-current, August 31, 1915, Page 7, Image 7

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r CHEAP STUFF FROM JAPAN Qreat Variety of Our Odd* and Ends la Made There and Shipped to America. If you, an American, bought a very cheap toothbrush lust year or thin year, the chances are that toothbrush was made In Japan. The Japanese sold ub 7,000.000 toothbrushes last year and will sell ua more than that this year. If you decorate yourself with a low-priced, near-Panama hat. It la quite likely that Panama hat was made In Japan. They Rold us almost $2,000,000 worth of them, wholesale, last year. If you go into a restaurant of the variety patronized by most Americans and regale yourself with crab-meat salad, or crab meat a la Dewey, or a crab cocktail?especially if you do this In a restaurant away front the Atlantic or the Pacific coast?it is almost a certainty that the crab meat in your salad or your chafing dish or your cocktail, came from Japan in tins, writes Samuel G. Illythe in the Saturday Kvening Post. We bought some $f?00.00t) worth of that product last year and it does not cost much per tin You buy yourself a nifty shirt made of thin silk?it is Japanese material. You snuff menthol for a cold In your head?it is Japanese menthol to a large extent. You use some camphor ?It came from Japan. So does much of the straw braid in your straw hat and the matting on your floor, and many other things, including objects of art and curios?which reminds me of a sign I saw in a Japanese village: Antique Curios Hought, Sold and Made. GENIUS KEPT IN HARNESS Writer Interestingly Describes Condition of American Literature Just Before Civil War. George Santayana in the New Republic writes of the stuffiness of American literature before the Civil war: "It would have been an interesting tiling if a thunderclap had suddenly broken that cloudless new-world haying-weather, and if a cry of exasperation had escaped some strong soul, surfeited by the emptiness and hlatidness of that prim little moral circle that thought it had overcome everything, when in fact it had touched nothing. Hut to the genteel mind of America, before Walt Whitman and the Civil war, there was no self-respecting opposition. Of course, in that boundless Held of convention, prosperity and mediocrity any wild poppy might struggle up weedily here and there amid the serried corn. Hut the ^ irregular genius had no chance. He ^ felt sincerely ashamed of himself, lie hid his independence, lied to the backwoods or to Europe, and his sad case was hushed up as if it had been insanity (for insanity was hushed up tool and buried with a whisper under tbo vaguely terrible epitaph dissipated. He probably died young; at any rate he never 'did' anything. Whoever was unharnessed was lost." Heroic French Priests. a rrencn lieutenant, the cure of a email village in Champagne, has just been mentioned in the orders of tho day for the brilliant manner in which he led a bayonet charge. The colonel of the regiment has made a special re port on the priest's valor. "It is a pity we cannot keep him In tho army after the war is over." he says. Questioned on the suggestion that he should remain a soldier, tho priest declared, "If 1 perforin with Joy my duty as a soldier. I do not forget that my dear little parish will need me when the war is over. In February I passed by my closed church. I hope to open it safe, and say a T)e Profun dls' for my de..r soldiers, and after ward a 'To Deum' of thanks for vie tory." Tho courage of the French priests in battle has been one of tho features of the war. * ? City of Parks. There are 182 parks in greater NewYork. But New Yorkers don't know that. The chances are if nine out of ivu ui iiu-iu were asaea to state at once which is the largest park belonging to New York, they wouhl answer promptly, "Van Cortlandt." Some would even answer "Central park." But Pelbam Hay park is 624 acres greater in extent than Van Cortlandt, and 413 greater than Central park. Pelhain Bay park contains trees that are a thousand years old, and still vigorous. The mother of all New York's parks is Bowling Green, which Is all of half an acre In extent, and the father of them is the nattery, which is 21 acres. The most picturesque and classic of the parks Is Morningslde, and the most populous is Tompkins Square. Parrots Fall as 8entinels. Parrots as aeroplane sentinels have not proved the entire success they were expected to. A parrot, long before human eye or glass can detect the approach of an aeroplane, will screech aud flap about In wild excitement. A number were placed in Eiffel tower tx> signal the approach of hostile craft, but as the birds failed to distinguish between friend and foe, their usefulness as sentinels was conslder^ ably limited. Tba QaMna Ttat Dm Hat Affact The Head UrctMf of its tonic and Inxative effect, I.AXATIVK RROHO QUItVI NK i* better than ordinary Quinine and doea not cauac nrrvounnrM nor rlnginc In head. Remember the full name and look fur the aisnature of K. W. OkUJVK. iic. TI1K LANCA81 h++ ? . +++++++ I I t | I I I ++ J. I I 1 i I ^ . [ .I jH 41 *.1.4-1 X-,1.4 + l>lt. I'OTKAT ON liYNt IIIMi. + li I I k t 1r ? *\ii CHAU i tH1 l l H :" Greenville News. < J An excellent discussion of lyncli i C | law. viewed and judged not by the j; fact of a mere lynching, but. from ' j i the deeper standpoint of cause and S A ' cn. e. will be found in an appended Community's In communication from Dr. E. M. I'oteat, president of Kurman Uni- ? * Attractions I- u versity. Dr. i'oteat treats of the ? > basic cause of lynchings?unre- 2 . ThU strained feelings, emotions of ancient j | man, uncurbed by education or r?*- J 'igion. having no thought for the so- j ; I eial order, no consciousness of the ?! VOO o'clock li real ?|iiality of an act. Frequently ? ? till' flliulillf nf on -' * . | ..u.iit v# an n* l lllct > II*" U'*iri" * . . , , , ' . 4l . 1. 4:00 O'clock ( i mined by imagining the net as hav- \, ii?K become universal. Suppose revery man did as you do, what would ; 815 O'clock t'i J be the effect upon society? ! From such viewpoints. I>r. Potent ;! 9: no o'clock l,i discusses lynching. It gives The J* News pleasure to reproduce his :?r ? \ tide, which is here subjoined: <> : s Pi Mr. Kditor:?The tone of South : i ern editorials on the Georgia lynch- J ing Is all that the highest righteous dness could demand. Hut I wonder ! 11:00 O'clock K if denunciation ol' mob violence does | not miss the mob. A man said to me yesterday that the governor might identify the murderers and \\ bring them to trial, but not a jury 11 in Georgia would vote to hang them; 3:00 O clock Fi and he added, not a jury in South Carolina would do it. * \ 3:45 O clock It If this is so then obviously wo J? have a work to do that lies back of public denunciation of lynching, o Our people must be reasoned with; 8 15 O'clock M they must be convinced that lynching under all circumstances is w rong. 9-00 O'clock G lis anti-social, and, therefore, bad ,I from every point of view. That is T | to say. their conscience must he en- * | listed on the side of judicial pro- i j cedure and against violence of every X ! sort before denunciation of their T ! sudden outbursts of passion will do J any good. I 11:00 O'clock A How call this lie ilnnu' Tli? T swer is educate. educate, educate! T j An ignorant people have no sense of T the long struggle of the race up from savagery to civilization, and, j. j therefore, they are not controlled by T 3:00 O'clock O respect for the law. which is the final -r 3:4.") O'clock L product of civilization. O11 the con- I j trary they are controlled by primitive t impulse, passion, prejudice. And in T | yielding to these they are not con- 8:13 O clock 1. science stricken as having sinned X against society; they are proud as T 0:00 O clock c having shown their quality, their in dependence, their courage. The precious gains of the slow + . .4.+.1.+ 4.+.I f t.+ i 1 toiling centuries are not precious to " | such people. How can they be? The lightened nation, yet I most enlightened among us have, at . ? . . . . , , , . torrm, Trietachke, I best, only a partial a|>preciation of an | achievement like trial by jury, for epidemic ot crime as , example. And until the average man danger to the nation has been brought to FKIOL history, pecially alluded to th 5 to see the far past, and to aspire to crease in crimes of help reach the still far off goal?wo efp>,.. Tho indlcation shall be helpless in our protests ? . . . . . Georgia mob was ma against lapses into savagery. v. , ... , , of unusual intelligenct Now nowhere is the growth of , .j . , , , they were men of co civilization more clearlv seen than in ,?w < ? * 1 Highly intelligent ma the handling of offenses?personal .... , licient provicatiou m ! insult. crime against person and 1 , mi , .1 ferocious as a wild lie property. The savage whether in .. .. ill is said and done, ancient tunes or in Eolith < arolina , , . .. . can conquer and eontr today?knows no other way but private vengeance, and he goes fortli to punish the offender in the manner his hot blood suggests He does Greenville, S. t .. At not see what would result if every body did as he does: he is Isolated by his rage and knows only himself i COi'eOE? ! a nd his enemv It is a great stride from the lowest "r* " ^u"er Cloorn v stage, when men see that even per- Give Hia Noonrw 1 11 i ? . ?f the Dou sonal honor and eonifort. are sater when taken out of private hands and ..,.Y (imfi tQ fjTnp ^ entrusted to society as a whole, and -vive tried to ccnvina that anything like progress is int- . eydiew, Auhyns Fi . possible until public control in the apparently with the ex form of law is substituted for per- would do something al ; sonal violence And only here does ' Fuller doom. 'Amoti i the great concept of Justice come in- fhe.. pointed accusing to view?dispassionate, impartial. ,iamr>? hut that argumt . , pros? me. for the possi and. therefore, majestical and com- . , ... ish name is usuallv manding The whole people must aKains, than sinninK. 'Bt grow up to glory in Justice, and young mothers of otl come to see that in Justice alone. Pertha M Clay. The ci can personal and social security be tioned his appetite, w 'tmnd, and further see that Justice been like that of a st cannot exist but in the cool air of anf' his language, which austere fact, rearherr by patient and mutterl.igs. in , worthy persons are alhl unprejudiced search Put this is t 1 , ., ? , . , , , worms, and his murmi process of education which must in- b?op ^ fo ft long.foP( I elude all the people, from the little head ^ children to the grand parents; and ' They referred to his ??? y uur i?n now iong iu?? pro- pjng sfockstill in the cess is. . highway and gazing up 1 Hut we must not allow ourselves *kies, the same tn to forget that education alone-even ?*mp<hinK about some . ? ,, seempd to think he had in the full sense implied above-will whj,e more Qr ^ m|| I never wholly meet the case Oer- rarg comlnR aroond ? f inany thinks herself th* most en- rear, rammed him, | to spring out of the w A Cough Remedy That Relieve*. that he d,if,?^*ted a?? It's prepared from the healing P** to be the reguli j Pine Raisem. Tar and Honey?all motorists to either nu m'xed in a pleasant, sooth'ng Oongh byns or bet on which wi 1 Syrup called Dr. Bell's Pine-Tar- If they don't bit him. 1 Honey Thousands have benefited by "Qf course all that ts uao -no need of your enduring ^ falr1 convincing pi that annoying cough or risk ng a . b . . .... 'angerous cold. Oo to your dealer, J.1 DVj ' I ask for a 2Rc original botf'e of Dr. benefit of tfc once and get rid of your cough *nd | read some < cold. ft I ?Kansas CXy Star / rek nkws. .\na sT ::i, u)i~>. \*? ".~*r "V*.**F". T* . " ? T* . ? . ! ". rAUQUA PROGRAM September 2, 3 and 4. Tlnw-I)ay Mobilization of the idustrial. Educational and Social For I'ui.slicil by KadclUTe, of Wiishinxton, 1?. rsday?Agricultural Day. AKTKKXOON ?rturu, "Tlie New Agriculture." liv tir t.'.. M. Vrooman. nu-ert. My The Bessie Leigh Concert Comp; KVKNIM; aneert and >Lntertainment. By The Me Leigh Company, ecture, "Armageddon and After." a Story of Great War. By Dr. Frank Vrooman. *iday?Educational Day. MOUSING durational Rally. Addresses by Hon. K. Watson. State Commissioner of Agricult and Hon. A. F. Lever, Congressman f South Carolina. A KTK K NOON orty-Flve Minutes of Fun and Magic with Mysterious Milburns. npersonations. Stories. Recitations. Grave Gay. Mv Charles K UmfntH "... >? ?. ..v.u>v>u, i uc ion actor. KVKNIMi agical Illusions and Prestidigitatorial Perfo anno. Hy the Mysterious Milburns. rand Scenes from Shakespeare's Comedies Tragedies. Hy Mr. Charles R Hanford, celebrated tragedian. Saturday. MOKMMi ddresses by Mr. John T. Itoddey. Presii Itock Hill Chamber of I'onimerci', and 1 A. J. Metliea. Lieutenant tlovernor of S( Carolina. A1'I'MIJNOON rand Concert. Hy The Lyric Glee club, ecture. "Visions and Ideals." Hy I>r J Frizzell, Chautauqua Director. I:\KM\G ecture. "Some Twentieth Century Problei Hy [>r. J. \V. Frizzell. oncert and Hntertainment by The Lyric < Club. h.r Hero his-j AFTER THREE Y spoke of t tie J . a ver% serious Lancaster Testimony Hen I shaken. i and he i s~ | ^j in e i?; iiio i. e "terrible in- Here is a Lancaster story stood the test of time. It shame (rapes, vvjtl) ft I)0|n, whieh will com s are that the home to many of us . , ,i Mrs. Jane K. Kdwards. do up of men S( 1<an<.as(?r. says; "Or >; indeed, that famjiy suffered from disonl nsequenee. A neys. The kidney a?'tion w n under suf- lar and caused much a There were severe pains a ay become a* smuJ, o| lho ha,.k and a ast; ami when rosj was impossible. Dot Religion alone IH.y Pills, procured at the ol the tiger in ! Drug Co.. gave me grea I (Statement given March - "> I , OVKlt TllltKK YKARS id. l'01 I'.A . rs Kdwards said: "1 n!\ ig 1H, 1 ! 1. a good word for lloan's Ki< and recommend them to my Price fine, at alt dealer simple ask for a kidney ren ' IN HIWI YET Moan's Kidney Pills the < Mrs. Kdwards recommends Vas Wil'inq to i Milburn Co.. Props . Ituffab the Benefit lbt- Dwindling Helgolan i Helgoland, in the North se 'annus persons , mldable German stronghold, p me that mv alljr yieidinK to nature's for agg. i.i a poet. famoU3 i8iand. held by Eng ipetation that I to jsgo, is 45 utiles noi tout it, stat-'d mmuij of the Kibe and V" ig other things. I thoilgh only a rock rising ly at his !i. ->t above the sea, and less than tnt did not iin j a mile tn area, has acquired essor of a fool 1 a ? more sinned' auerman naval nd many of (he ! *" l0C ha* been cal,ed to ler nays read | ?*5* ap, ln, tbe *> ****> ritlcn also men I "ritl,8h G?*>Io*lc?l society a ,1,1.1, , , ; its circumference in the yea "ieh ha" ,on* 120 miles. In 1300 the dlstan arvin* cougar. u waH 45 ^ ^ ^ ^ ' ?'T Sr' ' U had been reduced in are 1 . ' , square miles. Erosion by tt I I . .'l' beon the cause of the gradi irs might have _ . . . rnent. The wearing away soften blow on .Ki?? # .. ^ .. '. chiefly from the northeast into which the sea has out th i habit of stop-1 or mc>rf!?thiS having heea d middle of the u> the set of the currraU, h at the pitying the greater hardness of tha me murmuring body thut he shighestersf ie corner from M or caused him DIAMOND 3?> ay so abruptly , , etblng It ap- ^ JU-a? ?r rage among *v'tr/>',c | / Qr <h j over St. An-1 Cfi^ I m ay he will Jump unrwi - r J 4.V ;??f ?-r?.**l?? for CTTT-CTfR --T ? ? I >lA.w >ND llKA.MD PII.US ia Kit would Heem to .oi.d metallic h<>*ctt staitd with "OOf that he ia t,bbon- Tako no otdkh. Buy ? . 1 ,r"*ru? ?a ?k r,F CIII.< iiKs.1 willing to give IAMOND RUANO PII.t?,forl a doubt Vow *ara regarded r? Be-t,Safest, Alwnj rf his rhymes." < iOLD BY ALL DRUG I !?&?> EVERYWHERE J nun;iM."Mr? viaaMBBaMaajwrauanMaanwi HERE M> ? :: |j ECOIN tll>, I T You can not saw money a v t the garbage can. And that i 4 some groceries and provisior * 4 Shop tlie better way?b j t waste?make every ounce 4 T vitality of life. 4 * W'e offer you groceries ai lt'iii 4 * stand the test?that will reg itiii 4 T. arc cheapest because there 4. It is econonn* to buv sue > VII II i i * i * i 7. 4 and wasteful to buy anythn 4 j- V\v.g up the financial leal 4 v pocketbook will experience ; 4 T This store is the home of w. 4 T with us and let it mark the t davs for you. EDWARDS r.loe i T \ye sefi the Best Things to 4 I Cook ? i COAL SHIN 4 Mc+.f-+:k*:i* f > r++.+y+ * *-mk 'EARS ^+{4.4f4W4f^:4f+l n. Itlin.N I II- MM ?m m MM .r ?ruth. j Too Hot T that has -r is a storv T | Don't ( le of tlu> + lerod kid- v V '|r ~| Just In ?ii night's J ?n's Kid- J Standard 4. What Yon lumt i CANNED OR PRI LATKIl. + , vavs have 4- Allll Ul'St A 1 'i" X T T *n TT i frionds." X TVE s. Don't v i > * i t >, ncdy pot X 1 MJtVt1 ill! tile l>('St I 'ami' that + y . v ? Kostor- V VAN C >. n v DEVILED TUNA and d. T a, tho for- + Al'C I ?lb , is gradu- J. ces. This r nPiriFP TP TP r zxjss t BENNETT-1 ^nTfeet | Remember Our Fresh a thirfl of t Everj er*?ut Im base. Atthe fact - tmw^thl* SOUTHERN RAILWAY r 800 waa PrentliT Carrier of the South. c? around Ijr aa 1649 ft to four, pAggENGER TRAIN SCHEDULES. te aea haa . . , lal efface-! T"alns arrive Lancaster from: haa been *?- 118?'-Yorkvllle, Rock Hill and em side Intermediate stations 8:31 a. m. ilrtr uuiles 11S?Charleston, Columbia and ue mainly intermediate stations lu:06 at >l>o to a. m. _^k No. 114?Marlon. Blackaburg, Ch-rmtu 1 lotte and Intermediate stations, 1:35 p. m. No. 117?Colombia, Kingsville and ?ff I intermediate stations, 7:41 p. m. IKJbv Trains leave I>ancaater for: kND No- 11^?Klngsvllle. Co! lmbla and Intermediate stations, 8:31 a. m No. 113?Rock Hill, Blacksburj { Marion, Charlotte and Inter mediate stations. 10:06 a. m | NO. 114-?Klngsvllle. Columbia Charleston a^d Intermediate stations 1:36 v- n. kiueCQ) INo. 117?Rock Hill. Yorkv'lle and r??tupV/ ; intermediate stations, 7:41 rftus v tweety-firg i " ri Kriiobic. i Schedule figures are published aa GISTS information only, not guaranteed. wortr |,,?r Information as to passenger TtvbiHLr f: res, etc.. call on + + * j | COME j BE H H IP ; What will make a persoi '! with the world than a nice ot course. ank Every steak we sell has a ?nv T adulterated happiness and c . a piece ot meat to surpass t! ssie jJ Good meats are healthy iiu1 a i meats are just the reverse. ^ Come here for every kin< I | that there are none better ; i; CITY MEA rum ? \ i ? i the ; j and .. ? Hi K 1 T C H E AFFY i happier or more contented juicy steak? Another one. hunored per cent of pure un:ontentment, for there is not lem i?i this whole community, and strengthening. but poor 1 of meats, and rest assured imi nnn?? fan' T MARKET N ! IOMY -' s long as your profits go into ii s where impure and unwhole- ;; is often find their way. uy foodstuffs that have no count in the strength and !| ? id other eatables that will .? ister 100 per cent pure?that i; is 110 waste. h goods?it is extravagant ig else. is in your kitcnen, and your ;? i healthy relief. "Kitchen Economy." Trade ,i beginning of better financial \ j & HORTON | Cook and the Hoar Thinw* tn X With. i GLES WOOD t > < I 1 i < < *-!?) >? I :< ? +:+t+iHH+iHH+<4i+'+i4i,4f*44 o Cook? 1 3ook If It Is. | < nagine j iM Like in 2SERVED FOODS ? f ssuml That T WE IT. I IramU in cvi i'\ varirt \. X AMP'S ? WHITE MEAT TUNA | i- Try a < 'an. I FERRY CO. I jfeanut Butter, Made i r Day. ;; Lancaster & Chester Ry. Co. Schedule in Khect Dec. 21, 1914. Eastern Time. WESTBOUND. Lv. Lancaster ...6:00&m?2:30pm Lv. Fort Lawn ..6:30am?4:08pm Lv. Itagcoinville ..6:45am?4:38pm Lv. Richburg . . . 6:55am?4 :43pm Ar. Chester . . . .7:30am?5:35pm EASTBOUND. Lv. Chester .... 9:00am?6.45pm Lv. Kichburg ... 9:45am?7:27pm Lv. Bascomville ,10:00am?7:38pm Lv. Fort Lawn . 10* 30am? 7 : 55pm Ar. Lancaster ...11:00am?8:25pm Connections?Chester with Southern. Seaboard and Carolina & Northwestern Railways. Fort Lawn, with Seaboard Air Line Railways I jinonatup ou#K Q<v?? V.r? .. 11 ? V P Mel TTPP fllnnt. 7 Not re to Debtor* unci t'rcMlttors. All persons having claims against the estate of Nanry K. Mellwa n, deceased, are hereby notified to file the same, duly verified, with the undersigned, and those indebted to said estate will please make payment likewise IjYDIA O. McILWAIN, Administratrix Kstate of said De ceased. August 17, 1916