Fort Mill times. (Fort Mill, S.C.) 1892-current, March 13, 1913, Image 7
I
. 9
10 IS WHO IN !
WILSOMINET
Brief^ketches of Advisers of the
* New President.
BRYAN'S CAREER EPITOMIZED
mcnauo ? rimous i unnci DUiiacr,
McReynolds Skilled In "Trust Busting*"
Garrison a Man of Unusual
Executive Ability, Others Able.
Washington. .?President
Wilson sent to the senate
the names of the following as the
members of his cabinet:
Secretary of State?William Jennings
Bryan of Nebraska.
WILLIAM JENNINGS BRYAN.
Secretary of State.
Secretary of the Treasury?William
G. McAdoo of New York.
Secretary of War?Lindley M. Garrison
of New Jersey.
Attorney General?James C. McReynolds
of Tennessee.
Postmaster General?Albert Ilurleaon
of Texas.
Secretary of the Navy?Josephus
Daniels of North Carolina.
Secretary of the Interior?Franklin
* K. Lane of California.
Secretary of Agriculture?David A
Houston of Missouri.
Secretary of Commerce?William
C. Redtleld of New York.
Secretary of Labor?William H. Wll on
of Pennsylvania.
With one or two exceptions, these
men have attained considerable national
fame, and all of them are admittedly
able.
Mr. Bryan's Career.
William J. Ilryan has been so much
In the public eye for a good many
WILLIAM G. M'ADOO,
Secretary of the Treasury.
years that a sketch of his career
seems almost superfluous. Horn In |
Salem. 111., In 1800, he was graduated
with highest honors from Illinois college
at Jacksonville In 1881 and received
his master's degree In 1881.
In 1883 ho was given the degree of |
Lh. B. by Union College of Law, Chicago.
After practicing law In Jacksonville
and Lincoln. Neb., he served
as a member of the 52nd and 53rd i
^ congresses. Having written the "silver
plank" for the Democratic na- |
tional convention of 1890 and made
a sensational speech, he was nomi- |
nated for president, but was defeated
by William McKlnley. Nominated
nKairi m i?uu, ne was again beaten by i
MeKlnley, and then established the
Commoner and made a tout of the j
world. Nominated a third time in j
1908, he was defeated by W. H. Taft
Mr. Bryan married Mary Elizabeth
Baird In 1R84. He has done much lecturing
and written several books.
McAdoo the Tunnel Builder.
William Oibbs McAdoc, though a l
lawyer by profession. Is known to <
most people as the builder of the <
great system of railway tunnels of !
New York city. He was born near !
Marietta. Ga., In 1SG3 and was edu- <
rated at the University of Tennessee. <
In 1885 he was admitted to the bar. 1
LINDLEY M. GARRISON.
Secretary of War.
and the same year he married Sarah
Houston Fleming of Chattanooga. He
entered the practice of law in New
York in 1892. and since 1901 has been
interested chiefly iu tunnel construction
there. He is president of the
Hudson & Manhattan Railroad com
pany.
Lindley M. Barrison.
The selection of Lindley M. Garrison,
vice-chancellor of New Jersey, to
be secretary of war is in line with
President Wilson's idea that the hold
er of that position should be a man
of unusual executive ability. He is a
close friend of Mr. Wilson. Mr. Garri
son was born in Camden. N. J., November
28. 18?>4. He is a son of Rev.
Joseph F. Garrison, an Episcopal
JAMES C. M'REYNOLDS.
Attorney General.
clergyman, lie is a brother of Justice
Charles G. Garrison of the New Jersey
supreme court. He was appointed to
the chancery court in June, 1904. and |
reappointed by Chancellor Mahlon Pit- i
ney, new a justice of the United
States Supreme court, in 1911 for :? I
term cf seven years
James C. McReynolds.
In picking Jatnes Clark Mclioynolds
for the position of attorney general,
Mr. Wilson selected a man who has
had a lot of experience as a "trust
huster." He is a native of Elkton, Ky., ,
where he was born in 1S62, and a grad- j
uate of Vanderbilt university and the i
law school of the University of Ylr- I
^ ^ ** ^ ^ " '' ^ | ^ ^ |
ALBERT BURLESON,
Postmaster General.
glnla. From 1903 to 1907 ho was hr- ,
slstant attorney general of the United
States. He then returned to private
practice, but has been retained as special
assistant to the attorney general
in matters relating to tho enforcement
of the anti trust laws. Mr. McReynolds
is unmarried,
Albert S. Burleson.
Albert Sidney Burleson already has
served seven consecutive terms as
congressman from the Tenth district li
sf Texas and was re elected to the H
Sixty-third congress. He was born in 1
San Marcos. Tex., in 1863. was educated
at the Agricultural and Mechanical
College of Texas, Baylor unl- p
versity and the University of Texas, b
md was admitted to the bar in 1884. t
He was assistant city attorney of Austin
for several years before going to
congress. Mrs. Burleson was Miss
\dele Steiner of Austin.
Josephus Daniels.
Josephus Daniels, secretary of the
navy, is the one newspaper man given
place in the cabinet. He has also
been active in politics and is the member
of the Democratic national com- i
mittee for North Carolina Mr. Dan- j
lels was born in 1862 at Washington.
N. C Jinrl hpirnn lila nouanutu.t. ..... I
reer at the age of eighteen as editor j
of the Wilson (N. C.) Advance. In
1885 he became editor of the Raleigh ,
State Chronicle, which nine years later
he consolidated with the North Carolinian
and the News and Observer.
Franklin K. Lane.
Franklin Knight Lane has been a
member of the interstate commerce
j ~ ^ ^
JOSEPHUS DANIELS.
Secretary of the Navy.
commission since 1905, and this expo
rieuco is believed to have fitted him
for the executive and judicial tasks in '
administering the public land laws of |
the country. Horn in Prince Edward I
Island in 1864. he received his educa- i
tion In the University of California !
and became a lawyer in San Francisco.
Prior to his designation to the i
ommiHsion he was a Democratic political
leader in California. He was
Democratic candidate for governor, |
being defeat* *J by a narrow margin
I
DAVID A. HOUSTON. f
Secretary of Agriculture.
subsequently ho was tlio Democratic
caucus candidate for United States
senator
David F. Houston. .
In David Franklin Houston, elian I r]
cellor of Washington university. St. _
I-on is, Wilson lias a secretary of ag- s
rlculture who is familiar with the pro- j
cesses of advancing scientific farming jj
and allied questions in tliis country. Mr
vuoiuii nan |iiubii1'-ill <11 UK' I t'XilH
Agricultural and Mechanical college
foi a number of years, and lias taught ,
?- a
I ''
FRANKLIN K. LANE,
Secretary of the Interior.
ia several other educational instltu- K
lions. He was born In Monroe, N. C., f'
in 1866, was educated at South Caro- t<
Una college and Harvard, and re- f
ceived the degree of LL. D. from Tu* r
/ ' I
I
I
me and the University of Wisconsin,
le rimrried Miss Helen Reall of Austin,
'ex.. in 1S95 i
William C. Redfield.
William Cox Kedfleld lias just comleted
his first term as a congressman,
ut lie has been prominent in the poliics
of New York for a good many (
WILLIAM C. REDFIELD.
Secretary of Commerce.
I
ears. In 1902 and 1903 he was com
uissiotier of public works lor the i
lorough of Brooklyn. In private life j
e is a manufacturer of ventilating j
ml heating apparatus and engines. |
Ir. Kedfield was born in ISFiS in Albany.
N V.. was educated in the
chools of that city, and removed to
Few York in 1877 and to Rrooklyn in
SS3.
William B. Wilscn.
Pennsylvania's representative in the i
ahinct is William Rauchop Wilson of
^ w I L LI A MB WILSON. |
Secretary of Labor.
Hossburg, named for secretary of la- i
>or He was born in Rlantyre. Scot- I
and. in 1862, and came to this country
i> i.-in/. i in- next year ne oegan :
vorking in the Pennsylvania coal ;
nines, and from early manhood he has
>een actively interested in trade union
iffalrs. For eight years he was in- i
ernational secretary-treasurer of the '
Tiitcd Mine Workers of America, lie j
s now engaged in farming. Mr. Wiloti
has been a member of the last !
hree congresses, representing the Fifeenth
district of his state. lie is
narried and has nine children.
>T0RY LESSON ON ELEPHAN1
inimal Intelligence and Faithfulness
Are Recounted for Study by
Man.
The elephant is said to be the most
ntelligent of all animals; certainly
l'w four footed creatures have served
nan so ably and faithfully. How
ourageous and loyal they can l?e is
trikingly shown by an incident reite.i
by 11 Perry Robinson in his
ook "Of Distinguished Animals," says
he Youth's Companion.
"A native Mahratta prince was enay*
<1 in a iieree battle with his enelies,
and the struggle raged furiously
bout the standard bearing elephant.
lt tlie moment when it was ordered
r> halt., its mahout was killed. The
lalir.itta forces were borne hac k, hut
till the elephant stood firm, and the
tandard cont Into <1 to fly.
"Accordingly the soldiers of the
rincc, unwilling to be outdone in
Oil rage 1)\ an eb'Iillant r:i 11 i. . 1 unit In
urn drove tin enemy hark till tin*
ide of battle swept past the rooted
lephant and left it. towering colossal
ntong tin- slain.
"The fight was won, and then they
ouhl have had the elephant move
om the battlefield, but It waited for
ie d< ad man's voire. For three days
nd nights it remained where it had t
een told to remain, and neither bribe ; 1
or treat would move it. Finally they 1
put to the home village on the N'er '
udda. a hundred miles away, and
trhed the mahout's little son. a [
oundeyed, lisping child. Then, at
ist. the hero of that victorious day, 1
emembering that its master had '
ometimes. In a hrief absence, dele- '
ated his authority to the child, coni*ssed
its allegiance and. with shat- 1
?red battle harness clanging at each 1
lately stride. swung slowly along tha '
oad behind the boy." I
\
.. . . . .. * <4 U<
. ? kt, * * ,
BAD OUTLOOK FOR INDUSTRY
Decline of French Sardine Fisheries
Will Throw Thousands Out
of Employment.
Paris, France.?The sardine pack
era of France have of late, and as a
consequence of the very poor catch
In the last few years, decided to close
all their factories along the coast of
Brittany and Vendee.
This decision is parily due to th*
poor catch owing to the lack of fish
and the antlquatetd fishing implements
used by the "Breton" fishermen.
The fish, which abounded along
the coast of Brittany, seem to have
almost disappeared therefrom, or at
least the sardine shoals are no longer
to be found close to the shore as formerly
and seem to be now In the
offing.
The fishermen, being poorly equipped,
cannot go too far from the coast,
and the consequence is that their
catch Is very trlflng. They are un
Village Crucifix; Typical Sighl
Throughout Brittany.
able to supply the factories with a
sufficient quantity of fish, and when
they secure a Rood catch try to sell
It at very high prices.
The manufacturers claim that the
Spanish and Portuguest flsh caught In
large quantities are. on the contrary,
sold at very low prices, and thus the
Spanish and Portuguese manufacturers
are enabled to compete favorably
with French manufacturers.
Over 100 factories were closed Jan.
1, and many others, it Is said, will
close. It is also said that several
manufacturers will re-establish their
works in Spain and Portugal.
The manufacturers' decision affects
nilito !1 numhnr r\f ln^nr.??u? ?-u ? ?
.. V, I IIIUUOU ICD, BUUU UH
tin-can factories, olive-oil manufacturers,
etc., and in Brittany alone over
50,000 people will thus be put out of
employment. If the matter is not arranged
between the canners and the
fishermen, French Burdlnes will bo
very scarce in the markets of the
world.
HERO WILL MARRY NURSE
Clerk Gives Enough of His Skin to
Prevent Death and Thus Meets
Future Helpmeet.
Now York?When five-year-old Bertha
Wachter came home from a hos- j
pital with burns, which six weeks ago
seemed certain to cause her death, !
well healed, a pretty romance became
known.
CharleH Kaplow, a swimming Instructor
of the Young Men's Christian
association, while temi?orurily employed
as a clerk at liooHevelt hospital,
overheard a nurse say that Bertha
Wachter was dying in St. Mark's hospital
because no one could be found
who was willing to give enough skin to
be grafted on the girl to save her life.
Kaplow hooii announced casually
that he was "going out." He sought
the strange little girl, and insisted that
he part with enough of his skin to save
her. His modest sacrifice mnde him
such a hero that he received noteB
from several nurses, asking him to i
marry thorn.
Kaplow, however, confined to a hospital
cot for two weeks after the removal
of the skin, scorned the proposals
from others, and made one himself
to Miss Kditb Lee, the nurse attending
him. It was accepted iminedi- ]
utely.
MAN GIVEN CHURCH SENTENCE
Judge Orders "Backslider" to Attend
Place of Worship Each Sunday
For Three Years.
Chicago.?James Horn of 2606 Indl- ,
ana avenue was taken at his word
when he declared he was a good {
church member. He wus arraigned before
Municipal Judge Hopkins on a
charge of stealing two pairs of shoes
from a shop in South Clark street.
"Seeing that you're such a good
church member." said Judge Hopkins.
'! sentence you to ko to church
Sunday for the next three years?and
to put something In the contribution
box, too."
Horn left the courtroom, promising
to hvffm the next Sunday. He attrlbjted
his lapse from virtue to too intimate
acquaintance with the flowing
f>owL
HER PUNISHMENT /
VERY SEVERE
Mrs. Chapped Says That Her Pa*
Ishment for jfore Years Was
More than Anyone Could
Ever'TelL
. i. :. 4
Mt. Airy, N. C?In a letter from
this place, Mrs.;>Sarah M. Chappell
says: "I suffered for about 5 years
with womanly trouble, also stomach
trouble, and my :pun!shment was more
than any one could ever tell.
Several doctorp bad treated me, and
I had tried most every kind of medl*
cine I could think of, but none did me
any good. <r_
I read one day about Cardul, the
vomao'i tonic, and I decided to try it. (
I had not taked but about six bottles
until I was almost cured. It did me
more good than .all the other medicines
I had tried, put together.
; My friends began asking me why I
looked so well, and I told them about
Cardul. Several are now taking it."
Are you a woman? Do you suffer
from any of the ailments due to womanly
trouble, such as sleeplessness,
nervousness, weakness, and that everlastingly
tired feeling?
If so. let us urge you to give Cardul
a trial. You have everything to
gain, if It helps you, and we feel confident
it will help you. Just as it has
more than a million other women, In
the past half century.
Begin taking Cardul today.
N. B.? WWir to: Chattanooga Medicine Co?
Ladies' Advisory Dept.. Chattanooga. Tenn.. foi
Sfct*//nxtrm/ionj on your case and 64-pajfo book,
'Home Treatment for Women," sent in plain
wrapper. Adv.
Thought He Had 'Em.
Farmer lirown?Hello, John! How
you feel in'?
Farmer Jones?Poorly. I felt al!
right yesterday, but I kinder think today
somethin's the matter with me
1 feel some o' the symptoms of scla
tlca, lumbago, dyspepsia, ringworm
bronchitis an' a few other ser'us ailments.
,
Farmer Brown?Du tell! What lr
th* name, o* Tophet did ye do las'
night?
Farmer Jones?W'y, I read the new
Farmers' almanac till near momln1.
For SUMMER HEADACHES
Tllcks" CAPL'PINE le the beat remedyno
matter what causes them?whether
from the heat, sitting In draughts, feverish
condition, etc. 10c., 26c and 60c per
bottle at medicine stores. Adv.
A ycung man should learn to paddle
nis own canoe, even if his father does
own a motor boat.
ITCH Relieved in 30 Minutes.
Wool ford'a Sanitary Lotion for all kinds of
contagious Itch. At Druggists. Adv.
A married actor doesn't care foi
curtain calls at home.
i To Women w?m
Backache?Nervous?
Headache?Blue?
If yon suffer from such symptoms at
irregular intervals you should take aa
invigorating tonic and womanly regulator
which has given satisfaction for
over 40 years.
Dr. Pierce's
Favorite Prescription
Made without alcohol?a pure glyceric
extract of American forest roots. Your
druggist will supply you.
It Has Given Satisfaction For
Bmi Over 40 Y ears
FREE! FREE!
PICTURE
LVorth Framing
Send us your name and adj
dress on a postal and the names
' and addresses of three other
ladies who would be Interested
in women's wearing apparel and
and we will send you FREE
(absolutely no charge) a beautiful
picture worth framing.
THE IDEAL WOMEN'S WEAR CO.
082 Broadway New York Olty
We are headquar^
ters for Eggs, Poultry,
jG E el mm Fruits, Potatoes and
S W I Vegetables. If you
B II Ik want a reliable firm and
a live house, ship
us. We guarantee
highest market prices and prompt returns
Quotations sent on application.
WOODSON-CRAIG CO.,Inc.
COMMISStON M^BCHANT.S, Hldsril, Vs.
lEin IITPR Mrr.-to Ic&ru barber trade
litf |1 (VI I Li 11 'A-*'* toelRht week*. Tarn
w II Is I ri| ltloiiwtth Hetof tooU,SaV,
nil I la U "vHitfM.nr own tool*. S26.
Wiia-'H while learnln^i' .(Js^sr'wrlts.
RICHMOND BARBER COLLEGE, Richmond. Va
^^TYPEWRITERS
All makes, jAld. rented ?nd nkllfuUy
rent?ppil?un pnrrhtM.
?nrmi k% ttpkwritrr *x ! ?., h*m
"*<4/ iiln. Hut Kul Mala NUhi, IMaarf, T?
I'll.KOKIO fur Blind bleeding protruding
I'lft n We do not propose givlni something
for nothing, but we refund ybur money If
I'lleorlo fnlla to cure, we .trust to your honraty.
I'lleortn Irivc cured thousands of
ens-s. when- physic-tuna pronounc-d them Incut
able by remedli a Why Buffet a day when
you hnvc a money bock, propoaltlon. If Plleorlo
fnlla Mailed to you on, receipt of &0c.
I'l iKIIKIil (IlKMII'AI. CO.. Columbia, ft. C.
FOB HAI.E?I.KOO A. 'lipRRY CO., H. C.; 100
a. cult., 2,400 a. tillable; new modern 10 r.
houae, ana light. 12 te'r.aht houaea. barua, out- _?,
hldga . atock. mach.. etc. Kor partlculara
and prlcea addreaa D I.. Suggs. I.orla. 8. C.
Bortir Co. .Special Heed Corn, Bred twenty
yenra for pnrlty A yield, If buahel ahelled. la
cob. C. VV. Tompkins A Hon. Guinea, t a.
I.IHTKN?Send for picture of farma In 8outll
Missouri free. No darkles or mosquitoes. 40 a.
1400. Others. B. 984, Mountain View. Ma.
over too I fflHWVIRCCVVlPi
YEARS OLD i*ailH^fl||f[]]||7|]|
tV. N. U., CHARLOTTE, NO. P