The Barnwell people. (Barnwell, S.C.) 1884-1925, February 07, 1924, Image 2
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THE PEOPLE. BARNWELL. S. C.
I-
*/■ -
Clean Child's Bowels with
"California Fig Syrup”
111 Health B«gan More Than Four
Years Aga—Immediate Cause Di
gestive Disorder. —-—
Hurry Mother l Even constipated,
bilious, feverish, or slck/collc Babies
and 'Children love to takfc genuine “Cal
ifornia Fig Syfup/’ No other laxative
regulates the tender J.LUUi .J)aweh»-so
nicely. It sweetens .tho stomach and
starts the liver and bowels without
griping. jCoutalns no narcotics or sooth
ing drugs. Say “California” to your
druggist jind avoid counterfeits. Insist
upon genuine “California Fig Syrup”
which contains "directions.
Plate Marks
Plate marks or hall marks are the
legal tynpressions made on wateh casesf
jew.elry, gold and silver plate. In
Croat Britain the marks are, with u
few exceptions, optional. The piate
‘marks .Ire of four kinds. ThO'fctfttid-
ard or quality mark, the mark of the
particular oflloe where tin* assay js
JtUtttle. the mark siumifvljri^ tjie date.
an<rthe maker’s private mafic.
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A gleamy mass
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full of gloss, lus
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ly follows a genu
ine toning up of
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Falling hair,
itching scalp and
-the- dandruff Is
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rated, taking on new strength, cydor
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delightful on'the hair; a refreshing,
stimulating tonfe—nrtt sticky or greasy!
Any drug store.—Advertisement.
That’s Different
The difference between casting your
bread upon the water and loaning
money to friends is that the bread
j, cast upon the waters eomes back after
iiKiny days. Cincinnati Enquirer, v
STOMACH UPSET, GAS,
ACIDITY, INDIGESTION
“Pape’s Plupepsin” is the quickest,
surest relief for indigestion, gases,
flatulence, heartburn, sourness or
stomach distress caused by acidity. A
few tablets give almost immediate
stomach relief. Correct your stomach
and digestion now for n few, cents.
Druggists sell millions of packages of
I’ape’s Piapepsin.—Adv.
ENTERS U1ST SLEEP
CLOSED-HIS EYES AND SUPPED
PEACEFULLY AWAY SUNDAY
AT 11.15 A. M.
GRAYSON MAKES STATEMENT
Washington. — Former President
Wilson died Sunday at 11:15.
Fatigue and worn by the battle with
death which began before’ he left the
White House in l!)2l the war president
of Hut- two terms—eight of the most
momentous years in the history of the
world—dosed his eyes and slipped
peacefully away; —« —
The end carpe when vitality no long
er could retard the steady dissohition
which set in with the stroke of paraly
sis that .laid Mr. Wilson low on his
return fronf the western speaking trip
in 1919 in which he declared he was
gald to give his life for the League of
Nations if that would make it a suc
cess.
The general sclerosis had been pro
gressively hardening Mr. Wilson’s
,-artertes since he was first stricken Jn
191,9. The haemopligia which refers
to the paralytic condition of his left
side, manifested itself, principally in
Grayson.
• :u,.
at eleven fifteen
friR-dpft-amrflrmi leg.
A digestive disorder which develop
ed last Monday hastened death by a
new and vicious attack on the waning
vitality of the former. president. He
took a sudden turn for the worse Ehurs-
•»y n glit and his physicians found
that thereafter it was only a question
of how long they would be able to
prolong life.
The passing of the former president
was announced in the following state
m«nt issued by his -physician and
friend, ear Admiral Cary T
“Mr. Wilson died
this morning. ~ --
“His heart's action became feebler
and fe'eb'ler, and the heart muscles
was so fatigued that it refused to act
any longer. The end came peace
fully.”*
"The remote causes of death lie in
his ill-health which began more than
four years ago, namely, artereo-sele
osis with hemiplegia. The immediate
cause of death was exhaustion fallow
ing a digestive disturbance Which be'
gan ip the early part of last week, but
did not reach an acute stat£ until the
early morning hours of February 1.”
Mrs. Wilson, his daughter Margar
et and Dr Grayson only were in the
death chamber at the end. Dr. Gray
son, restraining tears with obvious
difficulty, gave the formal' announce
ment to waiting newspapermen, Worn
with the strain, his voice was barely
audible when he said that the for
mer president’s last moments had
been peaceful. ±
Things ta Worry About
Canton, China, is surrounded by
walls of brick and sandstone, tWenty-
flve to forty Pvt high and twenty feet
thick. - '
A »lriKlo iloie of T>r P^wy’n “Poad Shoe
will expH Wormw nr Tapeworm. No second
duao require,r 372 f’eurl St.t N, Y. Adv.
~A Fixed One
“Agnes still stays young.”
’ “Yes, It's an ohf habit of hers."—
Boston Transcript.
HAD TO LET
HOUSEWORK GO
Woodrow Wilson Joined Church In
Columbia, S. C.
' Columbia, S. C.—As a -hoy .in his
teens, Woodrow Wilson, united with
the historic First Presbyterian church
in Columbia, of which his. father, the
Kev. Joseph K. Wilson, was the pastor
at the time. . . ,
His parents lie buried in the church
yard and the body of his sister. Mrs.
George Howe, who died in 1916, also
lies in the same^ilot. The inscription
on his father’s tombstone was drafted
by Woodrow Wilson.
Woodrow IWilson’s father \y;js one
of the southern Presbyterian chufeh’s
most distinguished preachers. After
serving as pastor of the First Presby
terian church hrre. he became'a pro
fessor in Columbia Theological semi
nary herer '
An aunt. Mrs. Folk* B. Woodrow, and
<v
several cousins live-here now: “Ayp,^
Felie," who always referred tp her
distinguished nephew as ‘‘TomrtyJ’ re
marked at one time that "Tommy com
menced calling •'himself ‘Woodrow’
after he took to writing hooks.*
So III Husband had to do the Work.
Completely Restored to Health by-
Lydia E. Pinkham’s Vegetable
Compound
- " ■-■■■■ *
South Bend, Injiiana. — “I was all run
down, tired out, and had pains in my
back and bearing-
down pains “ I was
so sore I could hardly
drag myself around
and was not able to
do a bit of house
work. My husband
worked all day in the
shop, and then came
home and helped me
at night. The doc
tors said I had fe
male weakness, and
there was no help
bat to be operated upon, and of course
that would cost us a great deal. My hus
band heard about Lydia E. Pinkham’s
Vegetable Compound at the factory and
one mght he atopped at the drug store
and bought me a bottle of it. I had be-
__ to think there was no help for me,
_ at I took three bottles of it and now
I feel like myself once more. The price
for three bottles wasn't so much as the
doctor had charged. I cannot praise
Lydia E. Pinkham’s Vege.table Com
pound enough.”—Mrs.Dora Osborne,
480 Sherman Avenue, South Bend, Ind.
Women troubled wffcfT female weak-
neaa should give Lydia E. Pinkham’a
’Vegetable Compound a fair trial—now.
For sal* bv dnurffista everywhere.
Baker Says Wilson Had Cburage
Rarely Equalled.
Cleveland,'()hi<i.=r-Nt*wt<>n D. Baker,
war time secretary of war under for
mer President Wilsoii,. said :
"He had .t mind richly stored and
disciplined to almost perfect precis
ion lie h;ul a prophetic vision of
the need of Uie- world for pvace and
order, based-on understanding and ii;)-
right dealings and he had courage,
both physical and,mental in a degree
rarely equalled v even! n ^rrat men.
"He was a hit impatient of slow
heads and fiercely intolerant of bad
hearts, but he was a considerate, help
ful and loyal chief of those Wjm saw
him literally carrying the weight of
the world.
1
I
EX-PftESIDENT WOODROW WILSON
PRESIDENT WILSON WAS HUMAN
PHENOMENON OF GREATEST WAR
At 54 No More Than a -University' Professor and Political Writer;
at 63 in a Place of Power and Fame and Honor Unsur
passed in History—Defended His Unsuccessful
"• Peace Policies to the Last.
ington and was the recipient of much
public attention. ’ •
Mr. Wilson’s last public utterance
was last fall. November 10, 1923. the
eve of Armistice day, he spoke by radio
to the American people, defending ids
peace policy and saying that the Amer
ican people had withdrawn into h “buU
len and selfish isolation which Is deeply
Ignoble because manlfeifiy cowardly
and dishonornljle.2
Armistice day Mr. Wilson briefly ad r
dressed-thousands from the front steps
of his home, concluding thus:
"I am not one of those that have the
least anxiety about the triumph of the
principles I have stood for. I have
seen fools resist Providence before and
I have seen their destruction,-n's will
come upon- these again—uttor ilestruc-
tldh and contempt. That we shall pre
vail Is hs^ sure ns that God reigns.
-Thojk; you.” —. — ——
/ Chronology of Wilson.
Woodrow Wilson was born Deeem-
ber.28, 1850, in Staunton, Va. He was
the son of Hev. Joseph It. Wilson,
a Presbyterian minister, ami Jessie
(Woodrow-) Wilsoil. In 1885 lie- mar-*
ried Ellen Louise Axsen. They had
three daughters—Jessie (Mrs. Francis
B. Sayre), Eleanor (Mrs. W. G. Mc-
Adooi) and Margaret. Mrs.~~ Wilson
died August 10, 1914, in the White
House. December 18, 1915, Mr.* Wil
son marrie.d Edith (Bolling) Golt, a
'descendant of Pocahontas. The fiist
29 years of Mr. Wilson’s life CPveriHT
ids boyhood and education. The next
25 wqre devoted to teaching and writ
ing. With his election- to the gover
norship of New Jersey in 1910 began
his active political career, ills chro
nology follows: ...
1858—Family removed to Atlanta,
Ga. Student in private schools.
1875-IF—Student at Princeton!
1879^2—Law student at University;
of tlrglnr-T”' 1 11 ‘ l " ,l1 ’ r ' * T - "
1882-3—Practicing lawyer in Atlanta/
18823-5—Post-graduate course at
Johns Hopkins university in history.
Sick Tor Ten Years
Gained 60 Pounds
by Use of PE-RU-NA
Read this
History, In determining tbe place of
Woodrow Wilson, 28th president of the
United States of America, wilj pass
Judgment upon the most prominent
world-figure of the events growing out
of the most momentous war of all time.
From the viewpoint of hundreds of
millions hf lovers of liberty Woodrow
Wilson stood at the zenith! as the ex
kaiser stands at the nadir.
The great war.brought to the'front
many men whose names will live in
honor. In the last analysis three men
stand out: Wilson, Lloyd George,
Clemence.au. Of these three It was
Wilson who held the world's eye—Wil
son, th«> human .phenomenon of the
times, until .fifty-four no more than n
college president and political writer
and ut sixty-three on a pinnacle of
fume and honor and power unsur
passed if ever •attaifSn by any man
in history.
It Is impossible now. to differentiate
between Woodrow Wilson the m{in and
Woodrow Wilson the head of the most
powerful natioii of earth In wealth,
material and fighting men. Certainly
he could not have reached (tie place
he hel-d without great ability and' ex
traordinary capacity for leadership.
By virtue of his place he became a
focus of world attention ns soon ns
the.great war began. Before the armi
stice was^ signed he had become a
great moral leader with the ear of the
peoples of the world. Only ns such
could he have forced -upon the nllled
world the unofficial acceptance of his
project of a leagoe of nations, with its
fourteen points as set forth to con
gress January 18, 1918.
Abroad and at Home.
The enthusiasm evoked by President
Wilson's visits to I*nrls. London and*
Home was proof of ids unique place in
the regard of the people. It was- evi
dent that he was to Europeans not so
much a mail ns a voic<>—a voice put
ting into words .what they wanted and
had not been ablejLo-express; his ideas
and ldeal& wqr/e a sort of religion to
them. _ - '
But he showed himself n stptesmnnr
ns well ns a voice.’'Ho played the game
masterfully, lie.(^fnbUshed sympathy
between himself and his man or his
crowd. He made few if any mistakes
in taste or judgment. He “matched
his mind,” to n£e his own expression.
conference and^ot
President- Wilson
Johnson Says Wilson Able and Firm.
Chicago.—AH Americans are deeply
shocked and all alike grieve at the
death of forper .EresUlenjt Wilson, said
Senator Hiram Johnson.
"He was able, flftn and courageous.
Whether we agreed or disagreed with
his views, his unstinted and w’hoje-;
hearted devotion to them won respect
.and admiration of all.
*!Hc waa^pot only as our chief ex
ecutive a* commanding personality, but-
in' his time was a great world-figure
“History will write him as one of the
qustanding characters of this era.”
yith the besKor lie gut his
league of 'nation;* before the peace
It adopted,
s tv> monfhs= In
Europe may he divided into phases,
when he landed .tlie .attUude Juwnrd
the league of nations wnk this: The
government of France was antagonis
tic; Great Britain’s was suspicious;
Italy’s .w as skeptical. The first phase,
his triumphant progress through
France, England and Italy opened the
eyes of these governments-to his hold
on the people. The second phase, the
preliminary work of the; pea^p con
ference, convinced these governments
that" President Wilson had, an- Idea
rather than a set plan which he pur
posed to force upon them. This' sim
plified the situation and the rush to
climb on the bandwagon began.
Contemporary estimates of President
Wilson at home were as wide, apart as
tl)e poles. Senator J. Thomas Heflin
(Dem., Ma.), when representative
spoke on Ae floor of “Woodrow Wil
son, the gfentest apostle of world liber
ty and democracy since Jesus Christ.”
Senator Thomas W. Hardwick (Dem.)
of Georgia, said January 21 In the sen
ate: “I believe In a writtep constitu
tion. I believe in a strict Interpretation
of It . . -. and I believe that unless
we leave and abandon this mad satur
nalia of Imperialism! here at home and
return to the ancient principles of our
fathers there N wHI be no safety nor
happiness for the people of this re
public.” . .
Senator Albert B. Cummins (Hep.)
of Iowa expressed the half-way .view
when he said in the senate January
23: “I think President Wilson Is tin*
most intensely practical statesman of
this or any other, day. He began his
administration in .the belief that the
executive ofiice had not tin* power that
it ought to have. He inis accomplished
more in the direction in wliich he s»T
his face and his mind than any othe*^
man, either in this generation or In
any former generation; and the only
criticism, if it be a criticism, is that
he has not marched in the rlglit direc
tion and has done things that he ought
not to have done.”-
In the process of wresting from con
gress all the powers he .believed tin*
Constitution cohferrcsfaiftfn the execu
tive, president Wilson made many po
litical enemies who questioned not ids
ability, but his motives and methods.
To 1 particularize -would be largely to
review the political history of the last
six years. .The railroad situation, how
ever, may be cited " as an example.
Representative E. E. Denison (Rep.)
qf Illinois said January 15, 1919,
“Government ownership of nrHtrr.rris
will he the dominant political is
sue In the next national campaign and
Mr. McAdoo .\yljl of course expect to
he till? candidate of^hlk party. He will
hope tbefrftpltallze what bus been done
for the rn11 r<uid rnen T .’^ ;
President Wilson was re-elected in.
1910 upon a peace platform. October,
25, 1918, Just before the congressional
elections, he Issued all appeal to. the
voters of the’ United States asking
them,* if they had approve^ of his
leadership and wished him to continue
to be (heir unembarrassed spokesman
in affairs at home; and abroad, to ex
press themselves unmistakably to that,,
effect by "returning a Democratic ma
jority to both houses. The result of
t-he. elections was to change the po
litical complexion of both houses as
•No matter how long you have
been sick or how much you have
suffered, you must not- give up
hope. Mr. John Wick, of Mono-
monce Falls, Wisconsin, did not
and is a well man -today. In Sep
tember, 1918, he wrote: “I have
been a- user of Pc-ru-na for near
ly twenty years. L had catarrh of
the stomach *fOr Ten years. Noth
ing did me any good. I grew
worse until a friend advised me
to try Pe-ru-na. While using the
first bottle, I felt I had found
•the right medicine. I am entirely
cured. My weight was down to
135 pounds and now I weigh 195
pounds. I have used very little
medicine for the last' ten years.” .
The condition knpjyn as catarrh-'
-&}~ia not.coiHuitKl thft'jaoM and-
-throat. It may be found wherever
there are mucous .roembrances and
is responsible for a multitude of
troubles. . Coughs ( and colds are
catarrhal as well as- stomach and
bowel diso/ders.
Do as John Wick did. Keep Pe-
ru-na in the house. It stimulates
digestion, aids in throwing off the
poisonous secretions, enriches the
blood, increases the resistance to
disease and promotes good health
generally.
Insist upon having genuine Pc-
ru-na in cithet tablet or liquid
form. Your dealer has it.
follows: (Kith congress- Senate, 51-
DemAf-rats and 45 Republicans; house,
215 Republicans and 213 Democrats.
Mth congress -Senate, 47 Democrats
and 49 ^RepuMicsShP? house, 23iU Re
publicans and 193 Democrats. _
President Wilson in' attending tla*
peace^oiTferenco made several new
departures! He left the country'•during
oflieF He took the ofiiCe with him,*
ii'imments
ollic**
signing acts and
while in Paris,
though lie is empowered
makin;
; „
-IleJguoretl the
ni
senate,
byMiie Con
stitution to make treaties "by and with
the advice and consent <*f the senate.”
tePMUled ns the -Ainem.au regre,
sentutives himself, Secretary of State
Robert.Lausing, lieiinr’VnitttyTlffWiTfil
•MY'HoyuW'and General Tasker H. Riiss.
He sailed December 4, 1918, and ar
rived ut Paris ^December 14. The
French capital was en fete'for the oc
casion. December 24 he went to
England and thence to Italj^_ He
returned to Paris January 8., after a
journey that resembled a “triumphal
procession.”
After’ the preliminary sessions of the
peace conference President Wilson re
turned to the United States in Febm
ary, returning ta Par is* March 15, 1919.
lie signed the pewa treaty June 28,
1919, and returned to the United States
July 8. His second term as president
expired March 3, 1920.
After his retirement from the presi
dency Mr. Wllsob lived quietly, nfuking
a partly successful flght'to regain his
health.y He occasionally went to* the
theater and rode much in his car about
the environs of Washington. He bought a
home- In Washington and in 1921
formed a law partnership with Ruin-
bridge Colby, who had been his secre
tary of state, succeeding Robert Lan
sing. He took part In the funerappro-
cession of President Harding la Wash*
\
MRS. WOODROW WILSON'
Jurisprudence and political scleiice; re-
eeived_ degree of Ph. D. s
188(1—Associate professor* of'history
at Bryn Mawr college.
1888^—Professor of history and po
litical economy at Wesjeyarfy
185H)—Professor of jurisprudence
nnd pi^ltlcal- economy at Princeton. —
1902—President of Princeton (first
noneUdioai).
Political Career Begins.
1910—Elected governor of New Jer
sey.
1912—Nominated by Democratic-na
tional convention in BaltlmofeTn June
on forty-sixtli ballot by vote of !*90
out of l,0S<rover t’hnmp (’lark of Mis
souri nnd Judson Harmon of Ohio.
Elected president over Taft and Roose
velt.
1910—Nominated by acclamation by
Democratic national convention in St.
Louis in June) Elected- president over
Charles E. Hughes.—— :
‘Woodrow Wilson’s Ph. D. thesis was
“Congressional Government: A {study
In American Politics” (1885). His
later works include r _ ■ -
—‘The State: Elements of Historical
nnd Practical Politics” (18S9; new'edi-
tlon. 1911)-.
-“An (H(T*Muster, and Other Political
Essays" 11893). . -
“Division and Reunion” (1893). ' .
“Me^LBeraBire. and Other Essays”
(18‘wl; new edition, 1913).
“George Washington” (ISOfl;- new
edition, .1913).. • ■ ’A
“.Tho Free Life” (1908; new editl'j*?^
WARD OFF HEAVY “
COUGHS AND COLDS
P
^RIFY your blood and build up
your strength with Gude’s Pepto-
Mangan. It will fortify you
against colds; it will help you put
on flesh. Don’t wait until a heavy
cold gets its grip on you; begin to
Take Gude’s now. Your druggist
has it; in liquid and tablet form.
Free Trial Tablets
value of Gude's Pepto-Maiqcan, write today
for generous Trial Package 61 Tablets. Send
no money — just name and address to
M. J. Ureitenbach Co., 63 Warren §t.. N. Y.
Gude’s- ^
** A.
In the
1913).
- “Constitutloifflf^GovornTnent
United States" (lfWi8). .
“Civic Problems” (1!W>9).
“History of the American, People’
4k-A^4jgr«r4.a-»i**> wArt-irtAnrMaVK
Tonic and Blood Enrichery
Avoid & Relieve
COLDS
' INFLUENZA
'A: NS & 3 HR I a
iTMr+MLI+MmNHL
The New Freedom”’’ fl913).
“When ft Man Conies to Himself’
(1915).
Tax Returns Show More
Women Arfe in Business
Washington.—Wotflen *are more ac
tive now in the business world than
ever before in the history of the na
tion. Treasury department statistics
show that since the war the number
of women who. earn incomes large
riMAigh to be taxed has tripled.
For the tax year 1921 there were
89,634 wives who filed Income tax re
turns separately from their husbands'
returns, upon which -n tax of $43,541,-
348 was paid. For the same year
women who were heads of families
filed 115.7150 income tax returna, on
which $10,§48,457 was collected In fair,
while all other women filed 008,829
income tax returns, on .’which $58,-
610,604 was taxed. .
For.the tux year 1920 there wbre
77,558 wivoif separate from their hus
hands, wlio filed Income “tax returns ■
women w^o were heads of families
filed 132,181 tax returns, while all
other women filed 503,690.
BY TAKING
ft it qJttUqbU General Invigorating Tonic
¥1
9*
If HUNT’S SALVE falls In the
treatment of ITCH, ECZEMA,
RINGWORM,TETTER orotier
Itching nkln diseases. Price
75e at druggists, or direct from
A. I. Ilchirtt Mttlcln* C* . Shiran,Tex.
YOUNG MAN
let the Charlotte Barber College teach you a gooft
?2 de . a ?. d £ in ‘J* pe " de . t :t. Write for catalogue;
Charlotte Barber College, Charlotte, wfcl
pand you work the horse
same time. Does not blister
or remove- the heir. $2.50
per'bottle, delivered. Will
tell you more if you write..|
Book 4 A Crge.
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