The Horry herald. (Conway, S.C.) 1886-1923, May 24, 1917, Page SEVEN, Image 7

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t ^Patpa rJupang ^ ?1*hi, -.^The light within silhouetted tl$?, foc^U of Mrs. Adair?Funny with ghastly face and every lliuh trembling beneath her frivolous sllkeu *$lgee. "^Wllndly the girl stumbled la nod shut the door and put her buck to It. Ftor a moment the two stared at each other with eyes of horror. Then Fanny gasped one word: "Elaine!" The other Interrupted with passionate protest Informing her In tremulous accents: "Dotft call me Blaine! Don't you dare. Ttn Putrla Chunnlng?don't you understand, I'm Patrla Chunnlng mow? Wo?we're both guilty?guilty !?s sin?and you've got to stand by me 1" <END OF FOURTH EPISODE.) || "I DO AS I |! LI Iv K." i ( > < ?Individualism. ;j With Intercommunication drawing the world together In one centralized community, the act of the Individual can affect a lurge number of people; therefore, that form of freedom which \'s simply another expression for 11< ense to do as one pleasese can no longer exist. When Manhattau was sparsely setMod and most of the people lived on its southern end It would not have mattered much had there been a case of smallpox at the north end. The patient could have done prett.v much as he pleased without endangering any one else. * But a case of smallpox In the northern end of Manhattan to-day must he quarantined immediately to protect other people. When I was a boy there was no Society for the Prevention of Cruelty to Animals, and had any one suggested ML" man could not. whip his horse as uutch as he pleased he would have becu ridiculed. Indeed, In those days the idea tfint a man had not the right to boat, his own clflid as lie pleased was given little attention. When we were all driving horses and buggies there was no speed limit and a man did not have to procure a license to drive a horse. With the advent. of tiie automobile a license lias (become a necessity. The public must know that the man who operates an C^itoniobile knows first how to operate \1 and, second, to control it. Society is finding It necessary to take 4i way much of what has hitherto been i*alied "freedom of the individual." In my Judgment this process is only in lis infancy. Relation of Capital and Labor. The freedom of the business man to do as he pleases Is now being seriously challenged, and I most heartily agree with what Mr. John I). ltoekefellov. Jr., said recently at Cornell University ( ? the effect that one of the chief quali flcntlons for a manager of a large hash s concern Is rapidly coming to be the human quality and ability to ud-{ just differences between capitalist and laborer and to understand their relationship. | l iiti! rceu! years little brr?n<i ruiok-i in# was given to this problem and <ilf foremes were settled on the basis of "might makes right." All this is rapidly changing and we are entering a i period of now Industrial relationships. In the long ago the relationship betwooon capital and labor was that of j owner it tut slave, then came the period ! of master and man, thou the period of j i employer and employe. ea< h period , being a decided step forward. i In my judgment we are just now eu 11 tortug a period of copartnership. 1 where the tool user will he [tart tool owner aud where capital and labor will share more equitably in the profile ol ... I the business iu which they aiv jointly engaged. This jidviiniT is inevitable because of i our educational syslexu, whh'h teaches j the worklngman to tlilnk for himself. It IsJnevitable because intercoriiiiumlcation hu? told th workinjjm;. 11 in one community what the w ot kingman In I other communities are si riving for.a ml achteviiiK. It is inevitable, because st t ikes .anil I 'ockouts can never be settled satisfno ; torily or permanently by merely raisi 11 lc a man's wages. It Is Inevitable because It gives stability to business and because It is as advantageous to capital as to labor. As a matter of fact, when a workingman strikes it is not merely to obtain an increase in his wage; that Is what the papers tell lis the trouble is a 1 i about and that Is what he asks for: but way down underneath what lie is really striking for is a larger perron:age of the profits of the business. lie may not realize this. but. subconsciously, tills Is precisely what lie Is doing. No mere Increase in wages can ever satisfactorily solve this problem. It can be solved only on the basis of profit sharing. l.y profit sharing I do not menu bonus giving. I moan actual profit; sharing plans based on the earnings of the business, with a fair percentage i to capital and a fair percentage to labor after ordinary wages and interi est have been earned. Profit sharing can be done siitis-* ftictorily only when the business eon-! 'corn makes public its transactions, so that the laborer and the stockholder can know as much about the business as does the manager himself. i .. i in ttie adjustment of difficulties be* j tween capital and labor I am confident that open books will accomplish much more than open shops. These changes are far-reaching and fundamental. What are we going to { do about it? What is to be our men| tal attitude? How are we going to i handle these problems? i ('.in we approach them from the same point of view as did our fathers, who lived in a strictly individualistic I age? Can we approach them from the knowledge we have gained from law ltinil.'J wii'i. II I" ? 1 ...... in u ivi 1111*11 111 tut; HI? div 13:11 i<ti<* njfpv If We do wo will be combatting the mighty on ward 1 n.sli of now tlioii.'jfi11 and new conditions, provided in large nicusuro by | the scientist, the educator, the inventor. i Wiiat is the outlook? Is it a *ad. pessimistic future that unfold**? I>ocs life hardly seem worth living under the new (ouditions or does it t? > d out mnoiTHSU! an optimistic futurcy with finer opportunities and more worth while , goals? Let uie see tf I can pklure It as I see it. First, Just a gluuce into the past. j About the only goal we Jiave .bad ; has been the almighty dollar. The first question asked when a man dies is, "How uui<*h was lie worth?" with | scarcely a thought as to how much , be did for his community or his < ounItrj. But what has it all amounted to? ( ; Have the men who hare lived and worked simply to acquire great furtunes obtained peace of inlnd, happl, nese and honor? How many of them ! could answer t4TesM ? I Has the country l>een benefited by the course they hate taken? A very I large majority of our countrymen I would answer "No.** On the whole, the Individualistic i age has not been a success, either lor ' the Individual, or the community lu which he has lived, or the nation. We are. beyond question, entering ' on a period where the welfare of the community takes precedence over the interests of the individual and where [ the liberty of the Individual will he more and more circumscribed for the benefit of the community as a whole. Man's activities will hereafter he I required to he not only for himself i hut for his fcllowiticji. To my mind there is nothing in the signs of the times so certuiu as this. How the Rewards Will Come. Our only decoratiuii?the almight> i dollar- is receding into the background The man of exceptional ability, of more than ordinary talent, will hereafter look for his rewards, ,for his i J honors, not in one direction hut in two:?First?and foremost?in some public work accomplished, and, secondarily, in wealth acquired. hi place of having It said of him at 11 t ?1 * I ?. 4 l? #!?..* I . . . I . . 4> * ? * ? nin iicuiil LIJilL Hi* lt"H hH Uli'llV IIII1141 roti thousand dollars it will be said that h<? I 'rendered a certain amount of public service and. incidentally, left h certain amount of money. ( 1 Such a goal wiH prove a far greater. , satisfaction to him, he will live a more I > rational, worth while life and he will be doing his share to provide a better I country in which to live. I have two reasons for believing that future conditions will l>e as 1 have briefly sketched them: First, because the world is being drawn together in one centralized community through the wonderful development in science and tlie marvelt Ions work of the inventor. Second, because in our country especially we are entering upon a new stage of development., which calls loudly for men who will render disinterested public service. We face now conditions, and in order to survive and succeed we will 1 require a different spirit of public service. < One reason why ham strongly for ( universal military training is that i: 1 develops in the youth a sense of all around responsibility to his country, ] not only in time of war but in time of ( ; < j I Why a New Era Co-opera- i; t Hon Mast Succeed Pare t r I It inawiauausm. ' , t :' t I ;t < < \V7 IT f I intercom muni- 1 i ! W , , . ? i!t 4 cation drawing the s 4 world together, (ho act of an 11 t t 4 individual can affect a large \L I i 4 number of people; therefore >> r, X a 4 that form of freedom which 4 r 4 4 ,vt simply another expression 4 J for license to do as one I 1 i J pleases can no longer exist." t, 4 J ?GKOKtiK VV. IM\KL<INS. I 4 ^ 4 > 44-44 4 4-44 4 4 4 4 4 4 4-444-4-4-44 4 4 n t peace. He is much more apt to be .1 0 s faftlirui, conscientious servant tinui u he had is?t had military faining. He c enters public service in time of pcui?;? ? in more nearly the same spirit thai lie [\ would enter military scrvieo in time of 0 UP, COyWAY, 3. g. _ war iiaiiu*i>. rroui a sense or patriotic lut.v and a desire to serve hi* country nut his fellowmcii. hi ittcetil years we liave been hearing i great deal aliout government owner diip of our railroads. We are told that in tjieriu.iay the railroads ure owned !lie government a:*A that their opera ;lon Is most surcoHsful. This is true hut In t Jet-many ? ondltlou* are vastly different. '1 tie military I .mining of the youth, in raci. lue enure- *reuu or etiuetitiou in (.ieruiuny Is to iapress upon the young men of that laixt that tbey owe servicet/O tbelr country. NVben a uuu enter* Continued on Page Eight.) "FOOD CONTROL" NOT TO BE RADICAL Will Be Used Only to Break Up Corners or Prevent Extortion. Washington.?The government, if given power to fix maximum food prices, would exercise the authority only to break up corners or to pv. vent extortion, Secretary H"U>Lu explained in a letter replying t0 an inquiry. "The single thought in this connection," -the secretary wrote, "is that the power might l>e used as a club, to be applied only in individual case.where it is clear that an individual o< corporation had established a c? rne. or was practicing extortion. When that particular situation was controlled or the abuse eliminated, the incident would be closed." Referring- to popular misapprehension regarding the proposal that the government set a price on foodstuffs, Secretary Houston explained that only two suggestions have been made. "One is that the government be given power to fix a minimum price with a view to stimulate production," said the secretary. "This price would be sufficiently high to insure producers against loss. The other suggestions is that the government be given power to fix a maximum price, in extreme emergencies, to break up corners or to control ex tortion. o YOUR KIDNEYS Conway Residents IVrust Learn The Importance of Keeping Them Well. Perfect health means that every organ of the body is performing itr functions properly. Perfect health cannot he enjoyed i the kidneys are weak and disordered Thousands testify that Doan's Kidney Pills have a reviving action or weak kidneys. What this remedy has done in so many cases of this kind is the best proof of its merit. Read the following*. It's testimony gratefully given by a resilient oi this locality: M. F. Outlaw, Murrells Inlet, S. C'. says: "1 had an awful lot cf troubh wiui my Dark and kidney-*, brough' on by exposure. I could hardly kcor going. I was s0 sore and lame tha I could scarcely bend and it was ju ' us difficult to straighten. I uso< Doan's Kidney Pills as directed an< they cured me of all signs of kidne; trouble." Price 50c, at all dealers. Don" amply ask for a kidney remedy?gei Doan's Kidney Pills?the same that ured Mr. Outlaw. Foster-Mi Iburn :o., Props., Buffalo, N. Y.?adv. COUNTRY WILL NEED SOME FIGHTERS AT HOME Let us rememer that this country \ tecds fighters at home as wed as in he trenches. Suppose the men go to he war and bring it to a victorious lose, and the fighters at home fail' o do their duty while the fighters i; n the trenches are away. It is eas\ o sec that the returning soldiers in trad of coming* back to happy home? n thriving communities, would reurn to a devastated and ruined coma or. wealth. Those who have to go to the front iiu-t d *> t'vdr uutr by ' cctw v! ' . ' ' ncl those ' .1 > remain n *. t i> theirs | >ne i>- really .iv.st as irrporta-t as the thrr. Fresh air i th> host tin':"? To-day is the best time to bog'r. to uild for health? o for NIOKU A SPUING L.W'ATJVJ Dr. King's New Life Pills will re love the accumulated waste.? of win 21* from your intestines, the burde f the blood. Get that sluggish pring fever feeling out of your syn em, brighten your eye, clear yew omplexion. Got that vim and snay f good purified healthy blood. Dr Ling's New Life Pills are a non-grip ig laxative th ?t aid nature's pro ess, try them to-night. At all drug ists, taGj,' -adv. MAY CML MORE TO 1 TRAINING GAMP I I ^ Congressmen Asked to Try to f Have Auxiliary. Camp Established. Chattanooga, Teoji.? May IT*?Conpressmen front Tennessee, North Car olina and South Carolina wprp telegraphed last nig;Lit to- exert alt possible influence apon the War Department to authorise -m ai.rii;... ^ Q reserve officer-? camp at Chickamauga to accomodate applicants from those States *rh<> passed the physical examination, but were not accepted for the original cantonement because of the limited capacity of 2,500. If the commanding officer is givei\ au- c thority, promising candidates in the v auxiliary camp will be allowed to r attend the regular camp and take the ? ! places of cadets found unpromising I | after the first two or three weeks of il | instruction. t UGH! CALOMEL MAKES YOU DEATHLY SICK > t i Stop using dangerous drug be- i fore it salivates you! * It's horrible! ' i You're bilious, sluggish, cons':ipat- c ! ed and believe you need vim, da gor- t ous calomel to start your liver am \ ! clean your bowels. t I Here's my guarantee! Ask you, t i druggist for a 50 cent bottie of Dod- I j son's Live Tone and take a spoon fit' ? | tonight. If it doesn't start you 1 i liver and straighten you right ut \ J better than calomel and without grip \ I ing or making you sick I want you i to go back to the store and get your v money, \ Take calomel today and tomorrow ^ | you feel weak and sick and nauseat- t led. Don't lose a day's work. Take I a spoonful of harmless, vegetable I Ty rw 11 /-V? ? 'r- T T* ' * I o liivci iune tonight and wake up feeling great. It's perfect- ^ ly harmless, so give it to your chili y dren any time. It can't salivate, s c let them eat anything afterwards.'? r adv, PLANNINGTOQi VIDE ALSACE-LORRAINE 0 Amsterdam.?The Berlin Post be- .. ci lieves that the interpellations in tin : ? # * I Reichstag concerning Alsace will ce s itainlv be postponed. It says that tin {administration is about to make i r I radical decision in regard to the fu ture of Alsace-Lorraine, involving : division of the province between Bavaria nr.d Prussia. . h . - t Nohce of Discharge. t v The undersigned administratrix ? of the personal estate of I. T. Bel g (amy, <lec\l, will apply to the Ju.lg ^ of Probate of Horry County, at hi. j office at Conway, S. C. at i 1 o'clock f in the forenoon, on Tuesday May 1st 1917, for a final discharge a> sucl ^ administratrix. 0 MRS. RUTH BELLAMY, u Qualifie<l Admx., of I. T r( Bellamy, Dec'd. ^ March 00th, 1917. p o h A goo<l water supply in the spring u - Ul may save an undertaker's bill in the fall? a Read the Story in this Paper, IS!11 ? A photoplay without an equal I dTi.U..! JMliW <2V ckrial dupreme ?mw\frmonCastb ok' Ut* JDt\s**t, JUjf&uMiMmmnto 4mm*>w ,-W**tJ b INTERNATIONAL _ b f A T H E * tSMHi riMELY HINTS ON GARDEN CULTIVATION ilevor Permit the Soil af The Garden to Become Hard AUST MAKE A PRACTICE OF CONSTANT STIRRING >:nall Tools lor This Furpoaa U3od by Hand Are In expensive. The in port am* 9 of thorough and ontinuous cultivation in the homo 'egetable garden is pointed out in a tew Farmers' Bulletin of the United >tates Department of Agriculture, so. 818, "The Small Vegetable Gar. ler.." After the seeds have sprout. >d or after the plants have been set n their permanent location, cgfytinii;d cultivation becomes necessary. The gardener should never perruit he surface of the soil to become Kiked or even to form an appreciable oust. Constant stirring with harsd ools or a wheel cultivator should be )radioed between the rows and about he plants. Such a stirring pern i a he air to penetrate the soil, where it 'acilitates chemical action ami bae;erial activity, destroys v.'ecds which >therwiso wouhl utilize targ1 imounts of plant food, ami. finally, 'unserves the moisture supp'v. Th"4 mke is perhaps the gardener's mod >*aluab!e tool in cultivating. Th's can passed backward and forward ov%r ;he ground until it is in an open, mm ow condition. Where vegetables yrow closely it) the rows it often will >e necessary to supplement the cuti-ation by hand weeding. Small ir.t. ilements are made for this put po e. md may be purchase*) cheaply. It is 1? ??l 1 - , v., hi ssoir.e cases ro pull up veeds by hand especially where they jrow closely about the stalk- of the jardcn plants. Stirring the Soil after Uains, Just as the gardener should lie uvoful in early spring rot to dig the round when the soil is too moist, so 10 should bo careful late, in the seaion not to cultivate too son a : r t c ains. The stirring of wy IV.V.*"ty mil "puddles" it into a compact, cc-, neut-'ik.' nvtSS ITT which the plant !ood is s:cii el,' locked. The g-vdcow vil1 require attention, however, as' oon as the excess moisture from a ain has soaked in or partially evaporated. Unless t1 f ground is stirred it this time a crust will form almost nevitably. Such a crust. beside retricting the plants, prevents the iccoss of air, and also facilitates 'he oss of moisture tlvough evaporation. Irrigat ion. When, during prolonged dry spells, he plants give evMo.uo of suffering ecause of the lack of moi.-tu"o. \vaer must, if possible, be supplied arificially Where a supply of piped /ater is at hand, perhaps the most lsuuI method of irrigation is by prinkling with a hose. If sprinking is practiced it should be done ite in the afternoon. It is not suficient merely tG damper, the surface; thorough wetting should be given l more satisfactory and more econmical method of irrigation, however, > to ooon small furvmv -. ? ? v? f* O UUl v? CCI I Iflt? dws of growing plants and to supply rater in those ditches from a hose or ipc. Several hours after the water as soaked in, the dry earth should f* drawn back into place. Your Money Back I If Not Benefited I We Guarantee I ttat rvr acs women g If yon are suffering from wo- 9 men'a peculiar ills, v/o know this 9 medicine will bring YOU relief 9 because it has helped thousands 9 of other women for more than 30 9 years. Its value has been proven, 9 and that ia why the dealer, back- 9 ed by our own guarantee, will 9 positively refund your money if 9 you are not benefited by the very 9 fin t bottle. | TRY IT! THAT IS ALL W5 ASK. I SI at your Dealers*. See (daq io6my. 9 TMACHFR MEDIC9KE CO., S Ch .?tianoaij*. Terj?. W