The Manning times. (Manning, Clarendon County, S.C.) 1884-current, May 22, 1907, Page 2, Image 2
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LOUIS APPELT. Editor.
I TA'\Nr I NG0 S I. MAY 15, 19 0
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No communication ot a persona! character
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Entered at the Postomce at Manning as Sec
oad Class matter.
McLAURIN PLEADS FOR THE SOUTH.
Although ont of politics. and
we may say driven out by a gang
of political pirates, Hon. John
L. McLaurin, in the estimation
of those who are the makers and
builders of the country, stands
head and shoulders above any of
the political leaders of South
Carolina. When McLaurin was
in public life he made an earnest
effort to secure legislation which
would result in bettering the
conditions in the South. His
ability was recognized by the
ablest men of the country, and
notwithstanding his retirement
from politics his counsel in im
portant matters affecting the
material welfare of the South is
sought after. He has been re
tained by the Southern Cotton
G rowers Association to assist in
the prosecution of the New York
cotton exchange, and the result
of this litigation is looked for
to with much hope by both the
cotton growers and cotton man
ufacturers of the South, both
class have for years been the
prey of the sharks of the ex
change. Last Thursday even
ing in Philadelphia McLaurin
was one of the speakers at the
banquet of the American Cotton
Manufacturers Association and
the associated press gives the
following synopsis of his re
marks
At the banquet of the American Cot
ton Manufacturers' Association, in
Philadelphia last night, Ex-Senator
John L. McLaurin, of South Carolina,
responded to the toast, "The South,
Its Present and Future"-speaking in
part as follows:
Between the blue grass of Kentucky
and the orange groves of Florida, the
vast plains of Texas, and the pine
forest of the Carolinas, is found an ex
panse of territocy, which for fertility
of soil, variety of productions and kind
ly climate cannot be duplicated in any
other portion of the globe. Without
speaking of the vast coal and iron, tim
ber resources of the South, she has
dtmost a monopoly in the production of
cotton. The cotton crop of the South
is the largest export crop of this or any
other country, and to-an assemblage of
cotton manufacturers I do not suppose
any subject is so interesting.
I speak to you tonight froth the
standpoint of the man who grows the
cotton.~ The man who turns my raw
product into cloth, and then goes out
into the channels of trade and findsN a
market for it, is my best friend, and,
on the other hand, the man who fur
nishes you the fleecy staple to .keep
your looms busy is your best friend.
Thfe producer and the manufacturer of
cotton cannot long play the policy of
"dog eat dog." I maintain that the
cotton trade is only in a healthful con
dition, when the profits come to both
the manufacturer and the producer
from the pockets of the consumer, and
gentlemen, there must be an equitable
division of these profits. You all know
that when the planter was starving on
five-cent cotton the cotton mabufac
. turing trade was as unprofitable as it
could well be and survive. It was a
sudden shock and a rude change from
slave to free labor, but I doubt exceed
ingly if the change is greater than
what has occurred during- the past
twenty years.
In the first place, the South no
longer depends entirely upon its cotton
crop as its only source of revenue. Her
timber has increased enormously in
value within the past five years. and
from this source alone many a planter
has been rendered independent. To
bacco and truck farms in sections for
merly devoted entirely to cotton have
given a revenue which has enabled the
planters to tide over the summer
months. Labor, fertilizer and other
expenses have increased immensely,
and the old time slave labor has passed
away, leaving the planter to deal with
a new generation, whose sole idea
seems to be to get all the wages they
can and give as litle return as possible.
The old time plan of big plantations,
with overseers and wage hands, has
practically passed away, and :'nstead
we have the tenant system, with its
greater freedom had looser control of
labor.
Taking into consideration the general
advance in prices in all lines of pro
ductive industry, I do not think I ex
aggerate when I say that today cotton
is the cheapest standard product in
America, and that the prsce under
legitimate economic principles should
range from ten to twelve cents per
pound. At that price cotton is the
cheapest clothing material in the
world. I imagine that every spinner
wants a reasonably stable price. and I
know the farmer does, with the elimi
nation of extreme and violent fluctua
tions.
As a nation we have developed a con
tinent, created vast national wealth,
and today the United States stands as
the most potent factor of the world's
progress.
We now produce in agricultural and
manufactured products six times what
we consume. The question of pro
duction is settled: it's now a question,
gentlemen, of markets. Not only a
question with us, but with all the great
nations of the earth. During the past
two centuries contests for markets
have induced all the great wars which
have scared the face of the globe.
Who can doubt but that if Russia
had succeeded in her late contest with
Japan, with her denomination of Man
churia complete, that she would have
excluded the products of our cotton
mills from all North China?
The finding of markets and the c-om
mercial supremacy of the United States
depends upon such men as I see tonight.
What we need in this country is to
manufacture our cotton at homne, and
send the finished article abroad. ~You,
gentlemen are the pioneers in that
~eld, as truly pioneers as your fore
fathers, who with rifle and axe pene
trated the wilderness and redeemed it
from its savage tenants. This pioneer
work is only fairly begun as witness
the electrical power developments now
in prozrress in'the South. which wheu
comple~ed will vield enough p)ower to
run every spir'die from Virginia to
Texas.
So far our best mnarkets have been in
there. -e o- fhaz the whole world is
our field.
Considering that there are 400 mil
lion people in China. who would under
take to place a limit to the quantity of;
goods that China alone can consume? I
Vet India with her 200 millions popu- i
lation and operating 6 million spindles 1
of her own. imports more cotton goods
than China. In a trade amounting to
considerably more than 120 million
dollars annually we participate less
than one-half of one per cent.
At the New Orleans Convention in
1905. I took the position then and
events have fully justified the assertion, 1
that there had never been over pro
duction of either cotton or cotton
goods. It is under consumytion fromi
faulty methods of distribution.
The great obstacle to the extension
of our foreign trade lie: in the fact the
earrying trade of the world is in the
hands of foreign nations. Only about
three per cent of our exports go abroad
in American bottoms
For several years the balance of the
trade has been so greatly in our favor.
that we hardly appreciate the fact that
annually we are paying about 300 mi
lion for carrying~ the American pro
ducts on the seas. Rightfully this
large sum should be chargeable as an
import, for it is certainly a serious
drain upon the national wealth. As 3
we sell so much more than we buy it
matters little, but we cannot expect to
remain indefinitely on the crest of the
wave of prosperity, and we hope the
day is near at hand when American
bottoms will sustain and the American
flag protect the product of American
brain and brawn in every quarter of
the globe.
The great issues in this country do 1
not lie between the platforms of the
two great political parties, the real
divisions are the relations of labor and
capital and the monopoly of public
franchise for private gain. On one
side stand the trusts, large, grim and.
unrelenting in their greed; on the
other side stands organized labor, fierce
determined and socialistic.
If this country is to be saved, there
must be some power midway between 1
these extremes. strong enougti to hold 3
the old ship to her constitutional moor
ings. or she will break in pieces upon
the rocks on one side or founder in the
quicksands upon the other.
My friends, Theodore Roosevelt with
his '-big stick," is doing this country a
service not second to any President
who has ever occupied the White
House, checking on one side the rapa
cious greed of capital and on the other
the brutal violence of organized labor.
I have little faith in any political party
in these times. My faith lies in the
manhood, the exceptional manhood of
this republic, which has risen to every
emergecy, and I have been patiently
waiting to hear the voice of the
"Great Commoner" in response to the
urgent invitation of the eloquent
Georgian.
Republican institutions cannot live
with a plutocracy on one side and a
socialism on the other, and it will take
at least four more years with a "big
stick" to restore the equilibrium.
$100 Reward-i $100.
The readers of this paper will be pleased to
learn that there is at least one dreaded disease
that science has been able to cure in all its
stages. and that is Catarrh. Hairs Catarrh Cure
is the only positive cure known to the medical
fraternity. Catarrh being a constitutional dis
ease. requires a constitutional treatment. Hall-s
Catarrh Cure is taken internaliy. acting directly
upon the blood and mucous surfaces of the sys
tem. thereby destroying the foundation of the
disease.and giving the patient strength by build
ing up the constitution and assisting nature in
doing its work. The proprietors have so much
faith in its curative powers. that they offer One
Hundred Dollars for any case that it fails to
cure. send for list of testimonials.
Address. F. J. CHENEY & CO.. Toledo. 0.
Sold by druggists. T5e.
Halrs Family Pills are the best.
COLUMBIA'S HQSPITALITY DEFENDED.j
In The State of Monday ap-I
pears a letter signed "W. D.
Woods," which is a reply to an
editorial in this paper of recent
date, relating to the complaints
>f the reunion at Columbia. Mr.
Woods defends the .people of
Columbia against the charge1
of inhospitality and in domng so
"begs to make some observa
tions on the charge made by the
Manning Times that the old sol
diers did not receive a very cor
dial welcome from the people in
Columbia." We would -suggest
to Mr. Woods, that he read
again the editorial in the Times
he complains of, and he will see
the Times made no charge of in
hospitality, but based its edito
rial upon the complaints of the
old soldiers on the return fromthe
reunion. The Times made no
complaint, but nearly every old
soldier that we saw complained,
and some of them were very.
much disappointed at the treat -
ment they received. We not .
only heard veterans com- s
plaining here, but we heard a
number of them on their return
from the reunion, on the train,
going to other sections, making
the complaint of inattention and
scant food. We realize the di ffi-J
culty of entertaining so many
men, and that it would be very
hard to please everybody, but
with an appropriation from the
State, it does seem to us that
the arrangements could have
been better than when there was
no appropriation.
The following is Mr. Woods'
reply to the Times' editorial.
The writer begs to make some ob-]
servations on the charge made by the,
Manning Times that the old soldiers
did not receive a very cordial welcome
from the people of Columbia.. In re
plying to this charge the writer pro
poses to speak with perfect frankness,
not basing his remarks on rumor, but
from what he saw himself, If the edi
tor of the Manning Times, who is ai
fair minded and generous man, could
have dropped into the place where theC
old soldiers were being fed, he would
have never made the charges which
appear in his editorial columns, for he
would have easily seen that every pos
sible effort was made to furnish meals
for all who came. It is very true that t1
a great many sought and obtained ad
mission before the regular meal hour
and in consequence of this the meals
were not so good as the ladies desired 1
Ito give thqm, but that anyone was
made to feel like a tramp or an object 1
of charity is absolutely untrue, and it
is hard to understand how anyone
could have made such a charge without ,1
the slightest foundation upon which to 1
base it. As has already been stated, the
first corners, owing to the fact that din
ner was not quite ready, did not fare
so well as those who waited until the
regular dinner hour, but they had
plenty of ham, lbread, rice and coffee,
the latter not weak, but strong and
probably better than a great many peo
ple are' accustomed to drink at home. 1
At the regular dinner hour beef and I
potatoes were served in addition to the 1
thi~gs already mentioned; the failure
of the first corners to get them was
owing to the fact that they were not
real. Very few people have any con-f
ception of ~the immense amount of
work required to feed several thous
and peoule n athe space of a few hours
andeva i aplace as large as Colum- I
bia t wuldbe impossible to cook the f
food r-equired except for- the courtesy ~
of D. Babceck in pilcng his cooking
facilities as the service of the commit- '
,f:orts to serve the veterans, it being
hem a service of both pleasure and
)ride, and the failure to recognize this
)a the part of any old soldier was, to
;ay the least, very ungrateful. Some
f the young girls were so enthusiastic
n their efforts to serve that they
vorked themselves almost to the poinit
)f exhaustion.
I1s too bad Lo see people wIo
rom day to day suffering from physical
veakness wvhen Hollister's Itocky
.ountain Tea would make them well
Phe greatest tonic known. 3.3 cents.
rea or Tablets. Dr. W. E. Brown
0.
The more we see of the oper
tions of the federal rate bill the
mloreO art, we convinced that it
works in the interests of the
ailroads and is of no benefit to
,he masses. There was much
ido made over the rate bill, and
South Carolina's senior Seuator
vas held in the lime light during
he passage of the bill, but if
here is anything in it which
ends to lower rates, or causes
ailroads to handle freight more
?romptly, or even prevents dis
Trimination we are unable to find
t. The whole scheme in our
judgment is nothing more than
:utting a lot of money in the
reasuries of the great railroads
xithout giviug the people any
>etter service..
Panama Canal-Erie Canal.
Machinery is digging .the Panama
,anal a thousand times quicker than
he shovel dug the Erie.
Machinery produces the L. & M.
Paint at 50times less cost for labor
han if made by hand.
The L. & M. gives the best job in
the world, because L. & M. Zinc
bardens L. & M. White Lead and
makes L. & M. Paint wear like iron
Ior 10 to 1.5 years.
It only requires 4 gallons of this
elebrated paint and 3 gallons of
Linseed Oil at 00 ets per gallon, to
paint a moderate sized house.
If any defect exists in L. & M.
Paint,will repaint house for nothing.
Sold by The Arant Co. Drug Store,
Nnning.
The News and Courier canno'
bear the idea of anybody elsE
discovering good in Grove
Cleveland, and because John'Mc.
Laurin pointed to some good ac1
of the ex-President he gets a
crack on the knuckles from th(
knuckles from the Charlestor
worshipper. It is true, Johr
McLaurin did criticise some o1
Cleveland's acts; the bond issu(
for instance, but, because he dis
agreed with "only Democrati<
President we have had in fift;
years" upon a matter of busines
policy, it does not necessarily
follow that no good can come
out of a Cleveland. We thint
our Charleston contemporar3
has manifested a very unfriendly
disposition towards ex-Senatoi
McLaurin. but perhaps there i
method in this madness. Tillmar
is in the Senate and in positiot
to jerk the appropriation string
for Charleston.
A Narrow Escape.
G.. W. Cloyd, a merchant, of Plunk
Mo., had a narrow escape four years
ago,' when he ran a jimson bur into hi
thumb. He says: "The doctor wantet
to amputate it but I would not consent
I bought a box of Bucklen's Arnic:
S'lve and that cured the dangerous
wound." 25c. at The Arant Co. Drug
Store.
Who will oppose Senator Lat
iier for the United States Senate
aext summer? The Anderson
ntelligencer set tongues to wag
ing by a statement that ex
Governor Heyward confided to
friend that he would be in the~
race, but the Governor modestly
disclaims having given out any
such intiination. Governor Hey
ward is a shrewd politician, and
and a popular man, and should
be announce himself a candidate,
those running for the office
would not let grass igrow under
their feet. Senator Latimer
would probably cut his European
rip a little short, if convinced
that Heyward had entered the
race to be his successor. Hey
ward disclaims having intimated
be would be a candidate but he
does not come out square and
ay he will not be, and in jolly
ing the drummers and coddling
lose up to them he demonstrates
he knowledge of a good tihing.
rile traveling men of the StatE
an do a wonderful amount of
good to a candidates cause. they
go everywhere, as a rule, they
ire intelligent men and good
talkers. There is no doubt thai
E~eyward is a favorite with the
raveJing men and if he becomes
a candidate as we believe he will
he will have the strongest set of
vorkers of any candidate in the
ield.__ _ _ _ __ _ _ _
Kidney complaint kills more people
han any other disease. This is due to
e disease being so insidious that it
ets a good hold on the system before
is recognized. Foley's Kidney Cure
vill prevent the development of fatal
isease if taken in time. The Arant
3. Drug Store.
There is a law in South Dakota
vhich requires a license from
hose who solicit orders for
iquor, and if a similar law is
macted in South Carolina, and
he license fee made large en
>ugh, it will put a quietus upon
;hese travelling whiskey dealers
ho are going over the country
rofessing to be taking orders.
>ut are in fact selling whiskey
ut and out. The South Dakota
aw has been tested before the
Jnited States Supreme Court
Ld sustained. The plea of inter
~tate commerce would not work.
md the person convicted under
he act was forced to pay the
>enalty. There can be no objec
ion to such a law in this State.
'o require a heavy license in
achl county and a severe penalty
or the breach of the law will
>e an advance step towards en
orcing prohibition, in prohibi
ion counties, and a protectior.
o dispensaries in dispensary
ounties. In Kentucky there is
Statute which makes common
-rrer and expres cornanies
that deliver C. 0. D. liquor pack.
ages liable to a fine. The State
courts have sustained the law
holding the delivery of C. O. D.
liquor packages is not an en
croachmni upon inter-state coi
incrcc power. because express
colilpanies in relivering2 such
packages inade sales. and were
not actimg as co mon carriers,
but as warehousemen. This case
has been appealed to the United
States Supreme Court, and the
publication of the decision will I
be awaited with interest. If the
Kentucky Act is upheld the
liquor problem can be more
effectually handled. The South
Dakota Act re-enforced with
the Kentucky Act will put I
South Carolinain a in position
to drive out the greater
part of the illegal traffic in ]
whiskey. That legislation of
such a nature is necessary can
be seen by a visit to the express {
offices where the vast amount of
C. 0. D. liquor is awaiting the
purchaser, and also the almost
daily visits of whiskey drummers
who induce people to buy, and
give them encouragement to
violate the law.
Artists have no trouble in securing
models. The famous beauties have dis
carded corsets and have become models
in face and form since taking Hollis
ter's Rocky Mountain tea. 35 cents, c
Tea or Tablets. Dr. W. E. Brovwn & C
Co. -
W~e cannot but admire the c
efforts being made by the Col- c
umbia State to secure legislation C
for compulsory education, and C
we predict the succeeding legis- c
lature will enact a compulsory c
education law. The present gen- c
eral assembly has by a very
close vote put itself upon record
as opposed to such legislation,
but it will come, and the day is
not far off. The need of such a
law is apparent to those who
give attention to educationai
conditions in this State. We
have upon our statute books a
law against child labor, with no
provision for keeping these
children from becoming street
idlers. We say to the parents
"you shall not require your
children to labor in the mil.l."'
and yet we do not continue our
care for these children by com
pelling them to go to school.
The argument that negro
children would be forced into
the schools by such a law and
absorb the school fund will no
longer scare off anybody for it is
well known that negroes need
no law to compel them to attend
school, everyone of them go
voluntarily and glad of the op
portunity. It is the whites who
are indifferent, and do not take
advantage of the educational
advantages provided for by the
SState, and inasmuch as it is nec
essary for the future civilization
of this country that the whites
should be educated, the State
should take a hand in the tigh
and enact a la v to save the
white man from his own folly.
Of all the fruits there are in the land,
That grow on bush or tree,
I would give up the choicest ones
For Hollister's Rocky Mountain Tea.
Dr. W. E. Brown & Co.
MAKING WAMPUM.
A Processu That Requires Both Pa
tience and Skill.
With certain tribes wampum is still
highly prized and necklaces are worn
by men, women and children when
they are the fortunate possessors of
them. To make wampum various kinds
of shells are used, white and those
having a lavender hue being most
liked.
The thin shells are broken into little
pieces and by aid of nippers are made
as nearly round as possible. When
each piece is drilled In the center, ths
old time fire kindling style of drill be
ing used, the shells are then strung and
rolled with the hand on a fiat stone,
which grinds them until they are
smooth and even.
Comparatively few Indians among
those who prize wampum beads most
highly have the skill or patience to
make them, even though they had the
materials. The fact Is there are but
few wampum bead makers in the coun- C
try, and it often happens that long pil
grimages must be made to secure the
requisites for really fine beads, and, as
with the white man's trinkets, that
which Is "far fetched and dear bought" C
is most sought after for ornamentation. ~
Around some of the ancient ruins in
the southwest the Uile disks of wamn
pum are often found in the sand, and it S
Is probable that they were deposited
in the graves in very early times and
washed out or exposed by the wind's
action. These ruins are in the best
state of preservation of any .in the
country. Absolutely nothing is known
of their builders, and the origin of
these ruins was as much a mystery
when Coronado first saw them in 1540,
when he made his famous invasion, asI
it Is to the people of the present day.
Indian's Friend.
Oxygen and Mushreoms. 4
A singular way of removing oxygen
from the air by the aid of a plant is
as follows: Inside a glass bell jar, sus
pended over water, Is placed a mush
room, and sunlight Is allowed to fall I
upon the plant The mushroom ab
sorbs the oxygen from the air In the
jar, and the carbonic acid formed dur
ing the process is absorbed by the wa
ter, which gradually rises in the far c
to one-fifth of Its height The 'mush
room now dries up, but Its animation si
is only suspended, as may be proved
by Introducing beside It a green plant,
when it will recommence to vegetate, ~
being nourished by the oxygen exhaled
from the fresh plant
Hope.
"Mr. Merchant," said the new clerk,
preparing to ask for more money, "I
think I understand the business pretty
well now, and"
"Yes?" interrupted his employer.
"Well, keep at it four or five years.
Perhaps you'll understand it then as
well
adelr
Fir
two
have
-They'd better sea me first. secou _
Daughter-Oh, they've seen you, papa,
.s j ut as able to enterain. ,you. todaey asi--swe
r'ou first bought it. Then you listened to it hours at a
;ime. You will do so again if you will provide it with
iew records. Look over the list May and send in your
yrder or come in to hear them played.
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531 Poor John............. ................ Ada Jones. 9543 Ta ecm nteMt'ntMatfrM-oln
532 While I Have You .........................Gillette 0544 WhnouK wYu'eNtFroen. .. Stle
533 Good-a-bye John-Medley.. .. .... .. .. .Albert Benzler 9545 FnlaItrez......dsnCnetBn
534 I've Told His Missions All About Him . .... . Helen Trix 9546ThLatRsofSme......EdhHln.
535 Oh, Mr. Brown......................Arthur Collins 9547 SnAtno........il ury&Cou
536 Something for Jesus. ..............Anthony & Harrison 9548LeM.hartebnply'eGilIefBhndPor
537 The Thunderer March...(Sousa) Edison Military Band 9549 Lv' ee~d.......Eio eeinTi
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READER, Colleg ~ ~ ~ ~ Mae of Calso. Tesotcosi the vhicnit oficknings have cause
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