University of South Carolina Libraries
The Original of "Beck's Bad Boy" As He Is Tcd&y. jltfc \ I : fl\ r filif!^ ^ |b ihkji ; ?Mk.v ; - - - ':>' * - ^ * ?--^? rroDaDiy no &ook oi a generation ago was more gen&fellv read and laughed-or er than ^Beck's Bad Boy/' Today the .once'famous work has practically been forgotten and butfew people know th&t the original boy character is stijl aliv?. He is George Peck of Minnesota, son of the late Gov. Peck,, author of the book. ;He iskere shown ;with a .rifle presented to^ilm by-'his father in 1884. Inscribed on the silver plate, on the stock of the rifie is the .follow-1 ing "Presented to Peck's Bad Boy by j his Pa." . URGENT REQUEST ,j EAD ADMCMIANC i kii\ ruviTUiiv mii J | - ; :* THOUSANDS BEING DRIVEN FROM XAND BY TURKS. A; f 'I " Crying ;fdr Bread?Women and Children 7Jam Roads Fleeing From Heathen?Call Sounded. Y ??? v *;|' The Stptf. An W^ent ^a^pe^V for more food, clothing &nd medicine'for the starv-j ing Armenians who are being driven out of Uteii1 eountvy by' the thousands' by the e<T,atTti^tr.^:v^Se lare badly in , need o4Hre^ ^a?-?ottttmied rrt-a ea- j blegram received by the South Caro- i i;?n i:~r uua wup nciii I^IXCX fund yejsfce?d?y. The- message was; from Bayard Dodge, son of Cleveland H. Dodge; treasurer of the relief' work. Mr. Dodge is in the stricken j area and his plea for help to prevent j the. Turks from further atrocities was ! touching. "Armenian refugees pouring into Aleppo from Turkish frontier. Wo-1 . men and children homeless. Severe j weather commencing," the cablegram said. "Emergency work is impera live." JTAwful Conditions,/ Another cable report received j from the front, where the helpless Armenians are being driven from their native,lands, depicts awful con-1 ditions in the little foreign country, j "Roads from central Armenia to the, Black sea jammed ^vvith Armenia?; women and children fleeing beforej the Turkish army, unfed, shoeless t and half naked. Refugees crowding into Tifitc for possible safety, urgent appeal to committee to rush food,' medicine and clothing," the second. cablegram said. V The condition of the Armenians is ... r I causing great alarm among support- J ers of the little country in South j Carolina and authorities of the South Carolina office here issued an urgent appeal yesterday for more help in, the great work. Reports from the Near East bring stories of woe and J f disaster from all sections. Concern-1 ing the reed for funds and material| the following statement was issued by national headquarters and tele-! graphed to the Columbia office, Miss' * Mary B. Meetze, secretary: Wnoiesale fcmcrgency. "This unforeseen wholesale emergency, amounting to national tragedy, greatly increases amount of des-j titution, placing heavy burden upon! our committee, calling for great increase in our 1 *;uget unless we are willing to see*ter.s of thousands cf , our former allies die in exile for lack| of food and clothing, which we can send if funds are provided. Nationalists promise safely to orphans, property and refugees under protection of American relief workers, andj the fact that such promises were faithfully kept throughout four years, of war gives confidence that distinct-; ly humanitarian life Laving relief j work will continue. Moreover, hun-| dreds of thousands of the orphans ( # and destitute are in areas entirely, outside of control of Nationalist I forces, redoubling efforts to secure adequate funds imperative if disastrous loss of life is to be avoided." J Due to the numerous agencies now ! or soon to be asking: the people o: j the state to contribute to a numbei of causes, and among these being th< i relief of Central Europe, the Neai East official yesterday asked that the Armenian relief work not be con ; fused with any other society^ or or ganization soliciting aid for Euro tnqov* ncoc TVip NTpar East relief committee is the only organizatior soliciting funds and material for the rescue of the starving: Armenians and officials of the committee ar( anxious that the people remembei j this in contributing for the work. Was a True Friend of the Poor. Associate Reformed Presbyterian, j The death in Charleston, S. C., October 12, of Rev. A. E. Cornish, removed from the church below one who was widely known as -a friend of the poor and whose sympathies always went out to the heavy-laden, 1 ? ^ li n f o Mis Disnop says Ol mm, ne lias O j perfect genius for discovering the j unfortunate and winning their confi| dence." He was at one time ir j charge of the Church Home orphanj age, was the founder of the Sheltering Arms for the care and education of poor boys and girls and at the time of his death was chaplain of the Sea| men's home in-Charleston. He frej quently* said that the estrangement ! of the laboring classes from the church was not the fault of the creed ~ * * " H-- - j of the church, Due 01 me semsnnesa 'and exclusiveness of the members. . . not this a correct diagnosis? When [ever the church manifests the same I j .interest in the poor andithe desire to help them that characterized Rev. A. IE. Cornish, it will win their * confii : dence as he did and find the gulf between it ami them bridged. HAD INFLUENZA ONCE PATIENT IS IMMUNE | Paris, Nov. 17.?Proof that any one once having had influenza is immune from future attacks has been provided the Academy of Medicine by Prof. C. Deptor, head specialist at Val-De-Grace hospital. 1 * The discovery was made by inoculating a volunteer patient with microbes of la grippe during the epidemic of 1918-19. A severe case was the result. A few weeks later the patient was again inoculated in the same , way, but this time his system successfully withstood the test tmd he was-not HI. Since then the experiment has been made in a number of cases, always with the same results. Dr. Deptor believed that after an attack of influenza the system is so inoculated with millions of dead germs as to prevent the introduction of live ones. Other Paris doctors indorse the statement that influenza of the type prevailing during and immediately following the great war is a disease one can not have twice. FARMERS FACNICi SERIOUS CRISIS (Continued From Page 1.) er if he is to keep on farming. He must have an adequate price for his crop. Although absolutely incomparable with the.vast profits reaped Kv thp manufacturers. the farmer has enjoyed some comparative prosperity during the war?experienced a condition a little better than he struggled through so many years. With him, the decision is now made, and he will never return to the class whose earnings are just sufficient to purchase rude, hard food and indifferent clothes. * The last few years brought new faith to the farmer. Tenant after tenant had left the farms. Sudden ly the world seemed brighter, rrices went up. The farmers asked, "Are they coming back? Perhaps they will!" In fact, the laborers seemed almost ready to return. * The signs of prosperity lasted just a year or two. Today the horizon is darker than ever before. Cotton is, of course, the crop which I knew best. I come from the cotton country, and I am a cotton planter myself. The cotton situation has be come so desperate that a special committee from the farmers who met recently i:r Washington seriously coni'tiered recommendations to plant absolutely not a single bale next year if conditions did not change, to plant only half this year's planting next year if conditions had materially altered, and even if all the world markets were opened, to cut the crop one-third. This drastic course was considered by men who were, as I say, desperate. They believed it was the only Kvimr nvir-p nn to Dl'O na.l *>" """{S IT -- i duction cost. Think what it would mean to the world if not a single bale of Southern cotton was planted! The world's cotton conference beg?red the South to increase its crop. TVio i-nnfprpnce stated in the strong; I est possible terms that any 1920 j crop less than 15,000,000 bales would : result in a serious shortap-p. But to* An Employe Of Plant Makes H . ? j Frreman of Minter Homes Corpora I tion Solves Secret of Health Build; I ?ng as Well as Heme Building. > ; * ; j In Greenville, S. C., where the Minter Homes Corporation has es! tahlished another large plant for the i building of modern homes. Ernest j Ankrom, foreman of the company, ; has solved a problem far more important than the mere building of homes:?that of building up a healthy manly body by taking a few bottles of The Reese Formula R-ll. > Mr. Ankrom had arrived at such a , ' state of health as to be rather a liaj bility than an asset to his employers. ; | He read of The Reese Formula R-ll . j and what it had done for others. [j after a thorough trial of tms great J remedy, he says: j "Words can not express the relfef '. obtained from The Reese Formula t'R-11. I suffered so from kidney . j trouble that I could hardly move around end when I did I thought my back would break. I could not eat 11 or sleep well, my head ached, I was ! j dizzy and my bowels were irregular. j The first few bottles of The Reese P.11 />nrvof>torl this and now 1' Ul ill UiO. Ah-XX & V-V, I.VU i ' I ^ | day, although the government report i; predicts a yield of only 12,000,000 11 bales, I do not believe that more ?han 11,500,000 bales will be picked, j That is all that will be obtained out :: of the most costly crop the South has ' j ever grown. It will be the sixth short crop in as many years. The world ? j ?u ! nas consumeu eacri .veat iui : years nearly 5,000,000 more bales I than the crop grows, even though j spindles were. scarcely operated in j Central Europe. j I have cited cotton as an example, ; but the parallel can be drawn with | any of the great crops. The farmers are face to face with ruin, and they i must have help. To whom would I they naturally turn? The answer is j to their government. The manufac: turer has back of him powerful finani cial affiliations. The farmer has only himself and his government. Will ! his government save him from the 'peril which hangs over him in his 'waking and sleeping hours? APPEAL BY HARDING FOR SOBER THINKING > ( Continued From Page 1.) I i ~;tion and we must-, each and all of us, 'accept and discharge our duty of j producing for the world or of mirijs: ? 1 - * * ' tering to tne neeas 01 cuuiiun, ui 1 progress of mankind. j "There arc certain fundamentals i which are everlasting. Neither our ! own, nor the world's salvation is to I be worked, out through any patent nostrum, through any miracle of I statesmanship, through any governj ment panacea. Government is but J the agency to administer the collecj tive, organized public service. The I greater task is that of the American {people themselves. It is for them, ; ur^ler governmental leadership to ' meet the great test. j "Ours are millions of broad acres j eager to respond to man's cultivat' ing touch. We have an empire and | millions more are waiting reclamation. We have not half revealed our i mines nor measured our water pow! er. We arc unmatched in genius and l unexcelled in industry. We are proJ gressive in education. We are free 1 in religion and mean to stay free; ! 1 'v in j ana mean tvci w uv, ... I especially. We have more than the ! beginning of an adequate transport j system. We are awakened to the possibilities of inland waterways | and tardily alert to the imperative ' need of a merchant marine to widen ! commerce, world influence and na1 tional safetv. j No Jealousy. "We have been talking about tne 1 new* South for a score of years, and 1 more. It is new in spirit, new in dej velopment. I would like to see it j new in realization. I would like to acclaim a Southland with added good fortune and greater self-reliance j through diversified agriculture and I would like to see a Southland ' aflame with Industry, with transportation an ever growing problem. This _ land of raw materials oujrht to manufacture and locate its factories by j mine and farm and* orchard. There i will be no jealousy in the North be! cause your greater glory will be . glorious victory. i "Here we are today at one of the | great gateways of Latin-America. Somehow I feel that the Western i hpniisnhere is our f necial field of in j fluence and trade. Commerce marks the highways of friendship as well as rivalry. Our trade routes by sea j to the South ought to be as depend! able as our railway routes at home land there ought to be sufficient and I LAmitv -iriH cnncnvil jmiOny ,1 U'aCOUlliit, W1U4VJ Mi*v* V _ ^ ; Americans?Central and Noi-th. Bind 11 our friendship with the ties of trade I'and we shall make it indissoluble. j "We have ships now. we have the i Local Housing Great Discovery \ I fee-1 wonderful. I sleep like a two; year-cl<! child and can do my w-ork i better and with greater ease than ! ever before. The Reese Formula R-11 mlnmlv is the besi mdicine I know of.'' ! The Reese Formula R-ll will do j for you' just what it did for Mr. ; Ankrom if you have*any of the many | j symptoms arising from deranged liv-| , er or stomach tioublc in any form : such as headache, dizziness, nervous| nes?, sour stomach, biliousness., rheumatism. lumbago, backache, tired feeling, urinary troubles and other! complaints traceable to a disordered condition of the stomach. It will j make life worth living ycur work ; will be a pleasure instead of a ! drudge. ! Get a bottle of The Reese Formu-i j la R-ll today, now, while you are! ' * I thinking ot it at r. 1^. ways aim ( Gilder & Weeks Co., or at any druggist. You will bless the day J your attention was called to it. If there is any information you desire concernir.fr your case, write the Medical Advisor, Medical Department, The Reese Fofmula Co.. Huntington, J W. Va. * - i commercial foundations, our future lies in policies and practices. We must buy as well as sell to be sure, but we need the expandftg trade1 policy., its efficient agents in sales- j men and credit and the simple, practical understanding that commerce is the lifeblood of material existence. Our great assurance at home lies in a virile, intelligent, resolute people in a land unravtged by war, at en- j ! mity with no people, envying no one, i coveting nothing, seeking no terriI tory, striving for no glories which ! do not become a righteous nation, j This republic can not, will not fall, ! if each of us does his part. If we J but work and use thriftily and seek : that understanding iwhich reveals | mutuality of interest fto difficulties | can long abide. Such a solution can j not come out of the j^-eedy thoughts : of the profiteer or th^ revolutionary J agitation of those who >vould destroy. ; These are but surface disturbances. { We choose the deep attd ever onward ' currents of normal America for the 1 course of the republic.V? o e* n Jvil / ! nAnr i jicic nao a wuu vru?ii vi:i:;iaa> j tion of earnings whether in wages I ! or dividends, in termsfof dollars rathj er than in terms of purchasing pow: er. We must be more reoneerne d with 'i the substance of reward for activity in this coin measurement. And our I M concern must be in ,.a denendable i prosperity which i^ righteously ' shared. ilI "No law can alter nature or change w n Vinr/i vinf iraf 11V1 Hi UI/UC. IT.V liU V V 11VW V vu I t learned to combat destructive weather and the law of supply and demand i is eternal. But we may soften their j rigors and minimize their penalties. We want fortune a common possession in America. We want the cot! ton grower of the South to have his becoming reward ?vith the wool grower and the wheat farmer of the North. We want Southern factories to be tuned to the music of the mills of the North. Wo want your ports to send their cargoes under the American Hag to bear the message of peace and good will to all the marts' of the earth. There is no s 'ctiotialism in righteous American ambition.-;. Il is the wonderful and incomparable United States of America which sets our hearts aglow with becoming, aspirations and patriotic love?the I America of the constitution, free and confident of the morrow." Norfolk, Nov. 18.?President-elect Harding has accepted the invitation of the city of Norfolk to be the guest of the city on December 4, when he reaches here on his way to Bedford, Va., where he is to deliver an ado f f K/i IT11 Ire' \* "ifmnnl hrtiYif* 1 j UlCOO fll l?JIV^ Uli\o *1 WVJU11U1 Jiviiiv* City Manager Charles E. Ash burner received a telegram today from the secretary to the president-elect at Beaumont, Texas, acknowledging and accepting the city manager's invitation. City officials at Norfolk, Portsmouth and Newport News, the three Hampton Roads cities, are arranging for a fitting reception to the president-elect on his arrival at Norfolk. New Orleans, Nov. IS.?Presidentelect Harding while in the city today gave an enthusiastic indorsement of the Red Cross and stated that he was proud of the fact that when he is inaugurated he will become president of the organization as well. On Board Steamer Parismina, Nov.! V.) (By the Associated Press).-?Car-j Pvoewlrtnt.r.lnot Y\y. vd i PIT (;.) his! vacation vovage to the Canal Zono, J the steamship Parismina headed out! into the Gulf of Mexico on a straight course for Cristobol, where the vessel is due November 23. The Parismina carries 84 passengers, one-half of whom are members J of the Hard in it party. J r ' ! I f I rpi n . 1 1 l ne Best Advei in Newberi \ 4 . t rri nil 1 he neraia Twice a Week $2J ' j ' High Grade B Printing Ni m V , (p i. \ / 4 rni v rising Medium j rv Countv I and News AA ir 11 I UU a i ear in Advance j . I ook and Job II it Dnnfl 11 UCtllJ I/VIIV I ' - ???