The press and standard. [volume] (Walterboro, S.C.) 1890-current, May 27, 1914, Image 3

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lY 27,1914. 'HE PRESS. AND ARP.AVAtTERRORQ, S. -C. PAGE THREE *' - / X/ CHILD EMPLOYERS THESOUTHERN'S ) WHFN Yflii ARFNERK ARE AGAINST B1U SPLENDID RECORD! nntn ,UUfl, ' ,:nU ' flP ycu have the first synnrtom o# a nin-a<- -n Kmloratg A<Man.s But Mil- , ^ t!anta . May Wi lh the hahJ £al . lioaa of .A*er*e*OJ» Have iKnlure.!^ df „ K j ) , ,. ui 1rjlu „ lnto At-l ^ I oftt Axain -l Child,Labor. systoiu, nnd nr r \tnis p. opl a too of un ODn- cval tjji ir ru.'ht 'i anJ p:ttns and suffer :n silvr.»e, whi’.e,*^ v/j-.V. Vi/, this cunditien The Price laker Offets' This Week iantn and trains out, bear- tie n !Wi is more &i.-r:r>ns trouble. If those >o v.*: d v;.»uli! step taking , P-K Shrine r/ t j the annual meet- tfttdici K.* rotr. iininj; r.lcohol Of dnu;* Eighty-seven ^million Anteriian* > n;: of , ht . | mt ,,, r j a i j> ounc u C f ,he An- wl,ich ’ ‘ ^ t:ie lon-.!ations of health, *«• “ ld *• Arabic oril.r, and in addltioa uufbt not* lo ■ ork in iaiiorii'. ». ^.na'fiv extra aceflons «r rcBular.traili, create I.-aMuod to nuiaalc thrcaidrUt: the "k.uOV.OMO v\Uo !tVe , ‘»n nuunijr „ vtra ^ihinvnt on all repo+ar orean*, re fresh tlKv.r IsxiK-s r*’! bond states. 41.000,000 have forbidden'! ' £ . i. „ «r , 1V ! the wliolo tK-nons svsten; r t is rkli, u \Z' under U. to v.ork .n . .in, - ‘ J l UO}lt a,cld ‘* :,t of an >* sustainin K hourishmem, free irotS wines, children * v kird and on prai tit ally ^rhedulv nlcohois or uru»;s. bliun substitutes* 45.000,000- hav* on their : .j me th e sjtii),**™ Railway has just books an eight-hour da> tot th.idreu coiiipleted the largest passenger and 58.000.000 4 night work prohi- , , ov< . t , iellt in its uii<tory aud what i S bition for all under 16 >ears. believed to' have l>er. one of the How n.ary Atue’ftaus ate willing 1 - - -• FOR CASH )■ KIIKHAUPT LIM’ALS. to go on record as opposing sueb re- stricUons?- Last Friday they assem bled in Washington (or th6 third hearing on the Palmer-Owen bill which forbids the shipment in inter state commerce of goods produced in establishments where these four provisions are not applied. The friends of the bill were heard early in March and among the dosee speakers at that hearing were Mias -Julia C. Lathrep* chief of the Chil dren’s Barean; -Mfsc Florence Kel ley. of the NatonsI Consumers* League; Dr. William Draper Lewis, dean- of the University of Pennsyl vania La# School; Dr. O. J. McKel- way, of Virginia, and Owen R. Love- joy, general secretary of the Nation al Child Labor Committee. Miss Jane Addnms did not attend the hearing, but she is heartily in fgvor of the .bill. ' She has summed up her reasons for supporting it: ‘ Because our social and industrial problems are interstate problems, it becomes increasingly obvious that they must he regulated through federal legis lation. Every since the attempt made years ago by Senator Bever- —hlge, 1 have hoped to see a national child labor law. Hitherto, in our ef forts to enforce child la’bor laws we have not only inspected the facto ries but we have tried to follow the child into the factory from the home and school. In contrast to this, tie died movements an American most successfully ||pad ever accomplslhea by- railway. Arrangements for the departure of the special trains wece-to arrang ed that this was accomplished abso lutely without congestion or confus ion and as the result of‘the.protec tion given by the large force of spe cial officers which the Southern had on duty nt the Atlanta terminal sta- tion and at places where cars wore parked, not a single robbery or at tempt at robbery was reported.' 21ie parking places Were occupied oy 150 Pullman cars in which between 3.000 and 4,000 Shriners lived while In At lanta. being given every womfort aud convenience afforded* by the most modern hotels. These results could only have been secured by a railway system with an adequate plaat and an efficient or ganization and they followed the most careful planning, attending over months, and absolute attention to every .detail when the plans were being carried out. Every special train was accompanied by an oper ating officer and a passenger repre sentative and the crew of every train was personally inspected' by division and general officers before going on the run. The entirely satisfactory handling of this extraordinary large movement‘to A’lnnt:: the South ern Railway should aid all Southern Khrhardt, May *25.—Crops in thjpf setitn are in need of rain very much. ! Cotton, that has .teen planted will j not come up until a rain comes. Corn * is growing "fine. k Oata will bo short on account df dry weather. Mr, .and Mrs. J. W. Rhodes and itttle sons, Robert and Henry, from Loughman, FIs., are visiting rela tives and friends near bars. They are thinking of making Ehrhardt their home. Mrs. J. R. Carter of Varassvtlle. era visiting relatives nnd friend* here. Miss Mamie 'Carter has returned to her home at Ruffin, after visiting her cousin, Miss Biddle V. Carter of this place. Ascension Day was enjoya^ vary much here. There was aplcirtc at Mt. Pleasant and at Howsl's old mill; also a few fish frya. Mr. and Mrs. H. L. carter visited the latter’s parents, Mr. and Mr* Luke Stanley, Saturday night. J. W. Rhodes had business in Olar Monday. \ Quite a number of folks attended preaching at Pleasant Hill Sunday. Mr. and Mrs. W. C. Khrhard' spent Sunday at the home of Mr. an k Mrs. J. Daniel Carer. / method applied in the Pshmer-Owea <dKes in th< ;rto laud large hill now pending in Congress and in all the federal child .labor bills-that have beej, introduced, is to discover the violations of the law by tracing the suspected product. 1 believe that this wil* be a comparatively simple process, aud one particularly w^Jl adapted to Americans, sime our bUj- ine-s men are more accustomed to dealing with industrial affairs from f he material sale than from th^ hi!- man.” The Child Labor Committee of Virginia^(that stronghold of states’ rightst. the Executive Council of tbe .Massachusetts Hoard of Trade and the Los Angeles Chamber ot Com merce are among the many organi zations in all parts of the country that have endorsed the bill. The National Child Labor Committee is asking its members- particularly those who live in the states wit.i lower standards of legislation—to write to Uietr representatives at Washington endorsing the bill. Owen R. Love joy. general secre tary of the committee, said: ' Manv members are manufacturers aud large employers of labor who are tamest advocates of such restrictions upon ttje employment of children ur<- provided in the Palmer-Owen LiH. We have frequently hcl cor ‘dial- co-operatioii from them u- state campaigns, and.^ i tkinv :> country as a whole'. 1 * h T v .* the' conventions ,n the future. tbere «• little syumafh' iritis he statement of What One State Is* Do H<*w t‘«h a-t'«*la Refreshes. The remarkable success which^has attended—the sale of Coca-Cola has l»een explained in many’- different ways. Some hat*- attributed it to good advertising'’; others, to “effU cient management.’’ others to its ■'delicious flavor” and still others to the fact that it was the first in the field of “trade-marked” soft drinks. In this connection, tbe opinion of a manufacturing chemist who has an alyzed Coca-Cola and studied Us his tory for many years, will prove in teresting. 0 He attributes the popu larity of the drink in large part to its. quality of refreshing both mind and’ body without producing any subsequent depression. He points out the fact that the cheniical com position of Coca-Cola is practically identicaKwfth that of coffee and tea < wth sugar added t the only material difference being the absence of tan nic avid from Coca-Cola. He points to the laboratory experiments of Dr. Holliugworth. of Columbia Univer sity. and bf Dr. H t * Wood. Jr.. ;f Philadelphia, which prove conclu sively that the caffeine-containing beverages coffee, tea. Coca-Cola. »c.» relieve fatigue -by rendering : he r.erves and muscles more respon sive to the will, thus diminishing the reactance produced by fatigueJClicse «xf>eriuieMs aNo demonstrate the act that the caffeine group 0! bever- Siomccli Trwa&s; ‘ Rsslaredi ^ j p employers who publshed recently u • • ,l , , ages differ trom the stimulants 111 later is followed in, .uThJrov Industry. s»rl mum- .M« <!«.»;<■ ol .1..' U.«r t; 0 ! d *T.. . ratnd thn * ominoti Unmunn pruvu.- g the an of j r: 1 ; eH. a a,; simulation, thus resulting ormation of a “habit." ions of the labor laws, including the for 14-year age limit, the regulation ofi in hours of older minors, and tire posi- | / \ ine provisions that ar** recognizeX as.J «;■, ^ hoc. ; should be isolated from necessary for the enforcement of tncJ,},,. herd'"as gorvn as they are discov- lavv. 1 cannot believe that the Vraer- s L, rt . d Time lost here is likely to iran people wdll ever agree that to prohibit child labor would destroy indistry. Hut whether the federal law will pass at the present session depends largely upon the outspoken support of our friends/’ k CONFESSION Hopes Her Stateaent, Made wffl Help Other Wc t* Hines, Ah.—“I must confess”, say! Mr$. tula Mae Retd, of this place, "thal Cardui, the woman’s tonic, has done me a great deal of good. Before I commenced using Cardui. I I had a was drag around, and would have severe headaches con tinuously. mean the spread of a disease. There s «t l»w requiring dead hogs to be buriif& v Obedience to this law, ac- cordingNo-Dr. M. Ray Powers, state veterinarian and head of the vet’er inary diviai^m 0 f <‘ie»»»on College, is one of the be*t ways to keep down the spread of. hog cholera \ GAINS 40 POfMm IN 40 BAYS. • Remarkable Reunite of thf New Tis sue Ituihler T<m«*Unc Taldets in Many Oases «>f Run-Down Men anti Women. , i \ Prove it'yourself by buying a box >f Tonoline Tablets now. “Hy George, 1 never saw anything like the effects of that new treat ment. Tonoline Tablets, for building up of weight and lost nerv? force. It acted more like a miracle than a medi< ine.” said a well know n genjle- man yesterday in speaking of the 1 revolution that had taken nlace in his condition. ’’I began to think that Since taking Cardui, I have entirely there was nothing <)utt spitting up what I eat. Everything ' ould make me fat. seems to digest all rght, and I have gained 10 pounds in weight.” N you are a victim of any cf the numer ous ills so common to your sex, it is wrong to suffer. For half a century, Cardui has been re lieving just such ills, as is proven by the thousandt h letters, similar to the above, which pour jnto our office, year by year. Cardui is successful because it is com posed of ingredients which act specifically on the womanly constitution, and helps build the weakened organs back to health ■tod strength. Cardiff has helped others, and will help you, too. Get a bottle today. You won’t regret it. Your druggist sells it RVfeto; QtattMMga Mtflcla* Gw. Lodtet* Ad- vtv " r V Dept.. Ch*turwK«», Tern., for Sprctai In* •f-'afimu on your cm InJ book. 'Hon* lrMtn.ni for Wonm.-'MOI m givq-.nppn. NCU0 „ Notice. AH accounts dqe the* Press and Standard, of whatever nature, are Payable Iol. the Press and Standard, according to the terms of the trans ter when the business changed hands recently. Kindly make all checks Payable to THE PRESS AND STANDARD on earth that I tried tonics. Hreslives. heavy eating, diets, milk, beer and almost everything else you could think of. bu|. without result.” Any man or woman wMio is thin can reover normal weight by the best new treatment, Tonoline Tab lets ‘i have been thin for yoars and began, to *hlnk it was natural for me to be that way. Finally 1 read about the remarkable processes brought about bv the Use . of Tonoline Tab- Ms" so I decided to try myself. When I look at myself in the mir- row now I think it somebody else. I have put on- just forty pounds dur ing the last forty days, and never 'elt stronger, or more ‘nervy’ in my life ” , , Tonoline Tablets are a powerful inducer to nutrition, increases cell- growth. food, increases the number of blood corpuscles and as a neces sary, result builds up muscles and the figtlT**. For women who can. never appear stilish in anything they wear be- (ause of their thinness this remark able treatment may prove a revela tion. It is^a beauty maker as well ao a form ouilder and nerve streng- rnener. Tonoline Tablets cost $1.00 *or a 5"-day treatment, at druggists, >r mailed by American Proprietary Co.. Boston, Mass. , Y.T.- -i ru ./. ion, 7.. N 33l0 C t.. • 'f?v ’CLviamKRar. V- Jo. mm: vr.:c::: ^ •T feel r’.’.o a new person. .. . / I hav« no'!'*'!/ v ■ more l.:avYc-; '•/ ' feelings, no <'??.&'$£.■ ■* more pain. : T" v don’t belch ut» ens, can e'.t \^ most aiiythj^j without 1: IjlkSk*.. hurting me. I want to bo working all 1 the tlme s I ■. have gain J twenty • fo. r poui^s. ^ “People that see me now Mr*. Wibon U u S>:ion. end sav/me,two inant..s . , > sv” e.'tonUhed. I wR them P-rcna d - it.. I will any It is tht? ■ only i*»J; f^r spring end a!l ct,’. r nl^n- No argument Is nCeC’Hl fnr i n Wa Just get a bottm s-r4—tr** i f . " 1 you have catarrh cf tea ron:ash yet have a acrlo-ujrtroublo. If : u v nt to find a r< :pedy It would be v : y eas-y ♦o make tke^cr.pfrtm^nt Dcf. . y >u have taU A ri F’.rvna a week y u ’ J- Ukeljr find yoirrtcif better, t:.* n y l will need no tesUmontals on. Li? » .. of ether people, or arguments on • vlnce you. Until you try P-»rr u however, all the .^esthuoulals 1 , ti world and arguments, however !c *- leal, wrlll not move you. Juut om trial of Peruna will convince you. Peraona who object to liquid medi- oinoa can now obtain Poruna Tablets t Good Grade Rice, Ranging From To $4.50 Per Sack. .Iso, I wish to call your attention to my unsurpassed line of Groceries and General Merc lected stock and my prices are handise. I hi re the lowest. have a full, well se- SORE SHOULDERS HORSE AND MULE Dirty of Ill-Fitting t*oll«rs l -uali* the t’aUM*, Bays Veterinarian. (’lemson College, May 2f>. “li^is fealty a simple mutter for owners to I t -'vent ‘o ‘e .shau t iers n tlieir ; i lies and horses,” said Dr. M. Ray Pow ers, state veterinarian and head of the veterinary division of cleinjou College, i n discussing/this Condition, which often leads to more serious, trouble. All that is necessary, lie oontinueN. is to take a few prefjaji- tions. “The cause of sore shoulders in horses and mules,said Dr Powers, "can invariably be traced to i’.l tU- ting or filthy collars.\ Owners, as a rule, pay little attention to tin* tit ling of collars and their care, and consequently most farmers have one or more horses or mules with sore shoulders during their h'W season “The chafing of ill fitting collars causes inflammation and abrasion of the skin and. in many instances, in jury of the deeper tissues. Quite fre quently deep seated abcesses form above the shoulder joint at the low er part of the. collar teat. These ab- i Wratch and j^ itate an(J cAuse Vhcn- cesses and the growth of fibrous tis- matUta, and cleans out and streffgth- sue which forms in tins region re — -• « • ■ quire surgical treatment, but simple abrasions and inflammations of the skin yield readily to treatment if treated promptly. I “Abcesses which occur at the point of the shouler should be opened is soon .as they form, syringed daily with ^suitable antiseptic solutions, and be kept open until the discharge ceases. Failure to do this will re sult in the formation of-'hard, fibrous, tumors which can be removed only by operation. . "In this, as in ail diseased eOmti lions, however,” Dr, Powers added. “it is necessary to remove the cause This can be-done by )<eeping collars clean and by seeing that they tit «se that the shoulders will not be chafed xnd bruised. The practice of remov ing collars and bathing shoulders at ' ntdday js one of the best preventive measured that can be adopted \> soon as the skin of the shoulders a\> pears aensitlve, it should bf bathed /. •THE POOR MAN’S FRIEND.” several times daily with a solution ot alum or other astriugent solution. Removal of pressure from the in flamed skin is absolutely necessary and tins canftot l« accomplished by changing the sQJJb^of the cellar or other method, the animal snouid «•* rested until the shoubiers heal. Tow peas and sweet-potato* . ran be grown practically anywner.* ‘n e state. The special home ol Die soy bean is In the coastal plain and it is better tor farmers in other re. lions to try some other crop. Pm nuts will do well in practically all regions of the state, but in oruer to do so must lie planted on light. sa>: dy soil, and are not ad vised for the stiff red clays of the Piedmont. All of these crops can be sown right a now. SOUTH CAROUNIAnT TALKS OF MEXICO'i: any. quarter. He said that whilo Aifiericatis received every consldera- hands of .Villa, the oppo- rite^fs .true as to Huerta, and he gave many instances of insults and harsh treatment received •»> them it the i: a nits of his soldier* In illustration of their barbarity, lie told of how a German and his wife were gripped of their elothlrtg. ami in tin* presence of the husband she was outraged, after which they were put to death. Hi* said that most Mexicans entertained the belief that if the United States and *their country became engaged in a war, they would lie the victors, a propo sition which lie often -combatted with them, and as one justification tor liis position lie stated that the .Mexican soldier wmrtlntrained, espe cially .in the use of cannon and ottybr heavy - implements of war He said he witnessed a battle 'between the contending forces and was impressed with the wildness of their marks manship. Forced to Remove Flag. A true American. Mr, Wicker had a flag of his country floating from the naif of his house, but lie w'ax warned b> a soldier of Huerta to conse quences, and being at their mercy he’ had to comply. He said that nei ther army respects the bodies of the , dead, but that they are left ttnbur- desire or energy t«, resort tojtfis ted and that at the battle of Puebla method ^ And in this connection h>* the stench became so unbearable said that the average native Mexican I that many of the inhabitants hud to S|M*ak* Interestingly o| rendition- ns They Fvi*t in Tlmt t oiintrv. » Fr in the Kdgcfi'ld A.'verti-c* Mr W A H. Wicker, wife and.tw > ih idr.*!i have just arrived at Tren- 0 ton. tli® county, from Mexico. The ar* visiting his brother. Mr W in ♦ r left'Edgefield county sixteen year: aco and during that time ^a^ made ids home in Monterey, Mexico, Itav- ting lieen engaged in railronding. I mining and tbe mercantile "business With Ills brotliur—k.e paid Kdj^eUeM a visit yesterday and to a deeply in terested crowd talkeit most 'luridly of ib‘* country of his adoption and the troubles now existing there He was not ilriven ont. he said, but two rauses brought'him to this country, the one to visit his old home and s**e his relatives, the other oh account of the absolute stagnation of business in the southern republic. Nature, he said, had done milch for .Mexico, its lands being so tertfl-» that' without artificial aiu. but with brains ami energy they ran be made take it down or suffer tin to yield an abundant harvest, the on* drawback being a scarcity of water, which could be easily supplied bv ir rigation, had the natives either the. WNES MEMMTISN fMOTLWSMTfM of New Remedy are JT&kea It Is needless to suffer any longer •• • 11 ir 11 «i ii t » 11 <i • i with rheumatism, and be all crifoTed i,, "* , ” r ' inT,v i 87 ' Vk,,h nu ' r, ‘'! •♦•ave their liomes He said also tha't up. and bent out of shape with its ' ^ - -mm heart-wrenching pains, when you can surely, avoid it Rheumatism comes from weak, in- •ct ,v e kidneys, that fail to filter from the blood, the poisonous waste mat ter and uric acid; and it is useless to nsb on liniments or take ordinary a,i ‘ i, ''>C'H*'it<i t hnstian < tv- on account of the'railroads be remedies to relieve the pain. This 1 Hizar on: and hij* prediction is that torn up it was almost impossible only prolongs the misery and can’t ‘ aI ria ^ l ''** n * day the l nited Sta<*s get food stuff's, most of which is p possibly cure you. Ml Th« only w ty to cure rheumatism is to remove the cause. The new dis-, covery, Croxone, does this because it neutralizes and dissolves all the pof- sonouS'substances and uric acid that lodge in .the a joints and muscles, to live genius, iierfernne to Ine pilfering rather than by worn Mr. Wicker is ot the opinion, after a ev* nfe« n y* ar*’ study of the coun try and it' people, that they are uu by , in traveling on the ears coming home it was ti common 'iciit to see a dead bo lv hanging to a tree limb Mr Wicker further stated that the b v-rnmerit was bankrupt anti al- fii for s«*ff-government, certainly in .most entirely without money and th.* ireordanee with the rult-s and pra**-I p,>ople on tlie « ve of starvation: that ing to pur-. cna the stopped-up, inactive kidneys, ao they can niter all the poisons from the blood and drive it on and out of the system. _ “, * * Croxone is the most wonderful medicine ever made for curing chron ic rheumatism, kidney troubles, and bladder disorders. You will find it different from all other remedies.^ government is established by the reb Thera is nothing else on earth like it. It matters not how old you are, or how long prou have suffered, it is practically impossible to take it into the human system without, results. You will find relief from theftrsfYew doses, and you will be surprised how qsickly all yojir misery and suffering will end. * , * An . original package of Croxone costs but a trifle at -aay first-class drug store. All druggists are au thorized to sell it on a positive money- back guarantee. Tl^ee doses a day for a few days is often all that is ever needed to cure 1 the worst back ache or overcome urinary disorders. w il bring them to a right v\ay of chasmi and living, if *<h«* doe* not become the , ytatesv?’ Th proprietor of the unhappy land. saidr' was by l , r**di€t* Huerta'* Downfall. Mr. Wicker dei-lared that it was only a matter of a few day* when General Huerta and the powers he hipped from "Tile only rout** open,, he way of HrowiiKvfUe, Texas The. demand was so great along this line, said Mr. Wb ker. that prices ha*i gone to a -point fieyoad the reach of the average pt ^on'—4H repreaented must go down That the cents per pound-tor sugifr end .would come as soon as Villa and hi* victorious army reached and cap tured; Mexico i’ity. Following this, ho think*, will come peace«and a res toration of normal conditions, but ju*t how long this will hist is entire ly problematic, tor, declared he. thyv Mexicans are so treacherous and jrfv- en to insurrection*, that even if » jttMOh- 6' ' nee, $1: and other roffe**. $2.5t»; Tard. things in proportion Since fits stay in Mexico Mr. Wick er ha* ac« tnn it la ted quite a nico property, valued at about |111.000. He said Utaf umler existing condi tions it would only bring about six hundred, hut he hoped and expected * j if genuine peace were restored that, it would go ha*'k to Its normal and proper value. It is his purpose to return as soon as ponce conditions obtain." Mr Wicker 'Is ^Intelligent qnd conservative, and fie assured his listeners that the pictures he had drawn were true to life.. eis. rebellions may ri#e up against it. and these uncertain and unsatis factory conditions wtjl force and jus tify this country nm only to jnter- cede. but take^ drastic steps, even to the ex»ent of * exer< Miing a proprie tary right. Mr Wicker knows General Huerta well and hfs estimate of the man is that he is without character or spe cial .force, rreachfrou* and cruel to fhcflast degree, and unfit «« l*e at the head of any government- Mr Wick er says that as soon a* Huerta is i ,, rvu o o.* it Raptured and this.Tie say*,, is a for**- Burns, 0*d Sores Stings of Insects* gone com I union, hi* head-w ill go off Etc. Aatisrptic AMyae, used in* for the opposing force* give little.' :f ter nail y an j externally. Price 25c* RUB-MY-TISM -Will cure your Rh«ama<liiBi Neuralgia, Headache, Cramps, Colic, Sprains, BruiSeq, Cuts and \ v fA