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THE DAILY BANNER Entered as second class matter at the postotiice at Cambridge, Maryland. Tub Daily Banner is published every afternoon, except Sunday, at 112 High street, Cambridge, Maryland, by WEBB & WEBB, Editors and Proprietors Cambridge, Md., Dec. 10, 1912. The Cry ol The Children. Some of the evidence given late ly before the New York State Fac tories Commission is burdened with horror. It has to do with the ‘‘sweat shops” of New York, and the wo men and children who work in those “sweat shops” and the things that are made in those “sweat shops.” It is an old story to disrtict visi tors and settlement workers; but It Is a new story to the public. And It shows a condition that ought to be done away with at one?. It is a cause in which there can be no excuse for delay. And we i do not think that any court will can j cel a legislative remedy on the ground that It takes away property “without due process of law.” Here are some of the cases brou ght before the commission last Monday and it is, unfortunately, quite safe to take it for granted that they represent a condition gen eral to the “outside” work in the tenement house districts. There are more than 125,000 wo men and children doing “sweat shop” work In those tenement houses. In one district where 182 “sweat shops” were Inspected there were people in seventy-nine of those places suffering from contagious diseases. In some of those “sweat shops” j there were women and children en- , gaged in making “monogram” ciga- j rettes for “the high-class trade.” In one two-room “apartment” 19 men, women and children did their work, ate their food, and slept w r hen they were not working. In the room of one tenement a mother and four children were en gaged In running ribbons through corset covers. In the same room the father lay dying of tuberculosis. In the room of i|)ther tenement a number of women and children were working on feathers. Four of those trying to work were actually suffering from typhoid fever. A young woman was found mak ing dolls’ clothing. She had to keep at it sixteen hours a day to main tain herself in “subsistence wages.” In the room in which she worked and slept and took her food her father lay on a cot dying of tuber culosis. The case of Mrs. Madiline Vlt rianl was put In evidence as being 1 .. typical. Mrs. Vltrianl lives at 79 Sulli ▼ftn street, which Is in the West Side dock-tenement district of New York. She has five children. The young est of them Is aged five years. They all work eighteen hours a day. Usu ally their combined labors bring them 50 cents a day. On rare oc casions they earn 75 cents a day. Once they earned sl. The children In these “sweat shops” often fall asleep from ex haustion. They are sometimes too tired to work steadily. When they are sleepy they are whipped to keep them awake. When they are tired they are whipped to “speed them up.” The whippings are not punish ment. They are merely an incen tive to labor efficiency. It seems incredible, but It hap pens to be true. It is true not only of the cases cited here, but of an economic condition that is gen eral among the women and children engaged on “outside work” in the “sweat shops” of New York, and all outside work of this kind is sweat shop work. And we think that the presenta tion of the facts should produce an immediate remedy. Civilization can not afford to invoke the penalties that such a condition makes inevit able. The instance of the women and children working In the midst of contagion at the making of “mono gram cigarettes for high-class trade” Is impressive. But that is because It needs no Imagination to realize its meaning. Thousands of other cases may seem more remote, but they are actually Just as intimate,and there is no good reason why civilization should keep company with such Industrial squalor. We should put an end to this whole shameful traffic in helpless life. —Washington Times. —Table cutlery, carving sets, tea and table spoons, gravy ladles, sugar shells, butter knives, orange spoons, olive forks, pickle forks,and many other things in the silver ware line, at low prices. Phillips Hdw. Co. —Adv. 10-Bt. —Greatest line chinaware ever shown in Cambridge at Phillips Hdw. Co. —Adv. 10-Bt. teoooooooooooooooooeoooooocaoooooooooooooooooooooocc IMOH Kitchen Cabinets I Arc the most perfect JOPPA AGROUND. Steamboat with Full Passenger: List, Sticks in Tred Avon River Easton, Md.,Dec. 10—When just half a mile from Easton the steam er Joppa, of the 8., C. & A. Rail way Co., ran aground at 1 o’clock this morning In Tred Avon rirsr, with a full passenger list and a heavy cargo. News of the mishap was wired to Baltimore and a reply stated that the new steamer Dorchester had been dispatched to the Joppa’s as sistance. It was expected to get there early this morning. When the boat is afloat again It will pro ceed to Cambridge. The passengers remained aboard. No other sched ule of the company’s boats will be disarranged by the mishap. The captain of the Joppa was trying to get out of the river into deep water before the tide fell when the boat struck the bottom. What Rules the World. Many years ago John Brougham, Lester Wallack, Artemus Ward and others used to meet after the play at Windhurst’s, in lark row, in New York. One night the question, “What rules the world?” arose, and various opinions were expressed. William Ross Wallace, who was present, retired be fore long and some time later called Thomas J. Leigh from the room and handed to him a poem which he had Just written. Mr. Leigh read it aloud to the company, and Mr. Brougham made a happy little speech of acknowl edgment The thing was entitled “What Rules the World.” and the first stanza ran: They say that man Is mighty, He governs land and sea. Ho wields a mighty scepter O’er lesser powers that be, But a mightier power and stronger Man from his throne has hurled, And the hand that rocks the cradle Is the hand that rules the world. Awkwardly Put This Is one of the things one would rather have put differently: Mr. Bum blepup (at fancy dress ball!—I must apologize for coming in ordinary even Ing dress. Hostess—Well, you really have the advantage of us. We're all, looking more foolish than usual, and you’re not—London Punch. —Pocket cutlery, the best made, in all shapes and prices, at Phillips Hdw. Co. —Adv. 10-Bt. —Full stock 1847 silverware at Phillips Hdw. Co. —Adv. 10-Bt. —Toys, toys; this is toyland. Come and see. Phillips Hdw. Co. — Adv. 10-Bt. —Table cutlery, pocket cutlery, razors, and anything in this line, at Phillips Hdw. Co. —Adv. 10-Bt. —Xmas presents, great assort ment in most anything you could select, at Phillips Hdw. Co. —Adv. —Chafing dishes, percolators; we have a fine selection in copper and nickle. Phillips Hdw. Co. Adv. —Guns, pistols, air rifles, cat rifles, and sporting goods; great line at Phillips Hdw. Co. —Adv. —Tea pots, tea kettles, coffee pots, porcelators, casaroles, bake dishes, serving dishes, waiters,crumb ■trays, nut picks and cracks, chil dren’s sets, and many other useful Xmas presents at Phillips Hdw. Co. —Adv. 10-Bt. —Xmas makes them happy; get your presents at Phillips Hdw. Co. —Adv. —We have the greatest line of toys of all kinds In the city. We want you to see this line; we want to sell you; better buy early, be fore the rush is on. Phillips Hdw. Co.—Adv. 10-Bt. —Chinaware In all patterns and makes, cut glass, hand painted china, at Phillips Hdw. Co.—Adv. GOING OUT OF BUSINESS Now Is Your Chance Everything In My Store Hats, Ribbons Feathers, Velvets Real Lace, Neck wear All New Goods—At Cost MRS. JEFFERIS POPLAR STREET Tickets For Oxford 50 Cents Leave Cambridge 7 a. m. daily except Sunday. Ba. m. Sunday. Foot of Commerce street. Eastern Shore Development Steamship Co. Telephone No. 108. WE GIVE S. & H. GREEN TRADJNG STAMPS V l\/l A O GOODS NOW A IVI MO ON DISPLAY Great Line of Toys For Boys and Girls We would like everybody to call and see our great display of Toys of all kinds. Children’s Velocopides, Tricycles, Irish Mails, Wagons, etc. Everything for the children. This Is Toy Headquarters. All Kinds Useful Xmas Gifts For Everybody Nickle and Silverware China of all kinds Hand-Painted China Cut Glass Brass Ornaments Table Cutlery Pocket Cutlery Safty Razors Razor Strops Skates Sleds Scissors In fact, we have a wonderful assortment of Holiday Good. It will be to your advantage to see our line, so come early Hardware In All Branches Cook Stoves, Heating Stoves, Oil Stoves, Ranges. This is the place that has the goods, and at the Right Prices. We Save You Money. Phillips Hardware Co. The Great Hardware Leaders f Two Phones 49-50 and Muir Streets GREAT SACRIFICE SALE OF CHILDREN’S SUITS We Have A Lot Of Children’s Plain Coat Knicker bocker Suits Sizes from ten years to seventeen years that we want to convert into cash Sacrifice These Goods For Ten Days And give the people of Cambridge a chance to get the greatest bargains ever offered in Children s Suits. All these suits are new and of exceptional quality. Now is your chance. FINE SCHOOL SUITS 52.00 SUITS NOW 51.25 55.00 SUITS NOW $3.50 3.00 SUITS NOW 200 6.00 SUITS NOW 4.00 4.00 SUITS NOW 2.50 8.00 SUITS NOW 6.00 We only have a limited amount of these suits, come early and see these bargains and get your selection before they are gone. Stevens, Smith & Co. CLOTHIERS MATTERS FURNISHERS Let Us Urge You To Do Your Christmas Shopping Early J. W. McCREAOY J. E. FINLEY McCREADY’S Cambridge’s Best Store Offers you a most desirable Holiday Line from which to choose. Our carefully selected display of Holiday attractions will impress you with its worth, beauty and reasonable prices. s Jli 2 Pairs. Silk sl*o9 | F ■' Pairs Lisle SI.OO ‘ Kt Carefully Selected Patterns fc. The best looking line of $4.00 to SB.OO Mk SMOKING COATS A Very desirable Xmas Gift Ttat we have ever shown Men, Women and Children Men’s $1 00 to $3-00 A Good Selection Ladies’ SI.OO to $2-00 Buy Now, Early Child's SI.OO to $1.50 POPLAR ST. McCREADY’S CAMBRIDGE, MD. ORDER NISI. In Dorchester County Orphan* Court ORDERED, this 19th day of November A.D. 1912, that the sale of the leasehold estate i of the said Thomas 8. Applegarth, deceased, | made by Sarah C. Marshall, admlnl tratrlx of the said deceased. In pursuance of the laws : of Maryland, vesting the Orphans’ Court of i said state with the power to order the sale ol I leasehold estate, and this day reported to this Court by the said Harah C. Marshall, ad ! mlnlstratrlx, be ratified and confirmed, un ! less cause to the contrary thereof be shown | on or before the 14th day of December next; I orovided a copy of this order be Inserted in : some newspaper published In Dorchester ! County, at least once a week for three suc cessive weeks, b-fore the 17th day of Decem ber next. THOS. B. WINDSOR, L. D. T. NOBLE. Judges of the Orphans’ Court for Dorchester County. RUSSELL P. SMITH, Register of Wills for Dorchester County. True copy. _ _ Test: RUSSELL P SMITH, Register of Wilis for Dorchester County. Just Received A New Supply of Collar Sweaters For Men and Boys $1 .OO to $5.00 J. F. WILLIS & SON “The Quality Shop.** YELLOW TRADING STAMPS I SPECIAL NOTICE I AUTOMOBILES OVERHAULED | and put in first-class shape by experienced man. Work | guaranteed satisfactory. Auto supplies of all kinds on hand and if we have not got it we will get it for you. Chas. T. Mace THE BIKE AND ENGINE MAN Phone 20/. Machine Shop. 120 Race St. 800000000000000000000000000000000000000000000000000 I Telephone Us Your Want Ads. USEFUL CHRISTMAS GIFTS Nothing more useful than a pair of House Slippers for the Infant, Misses, Boys, Lady or Man could be found for a Christmas present. We Have The Largest and Most Complete Line of House and Evening Slippers in Your City Price From 50c to $5.00 Shop Early and avoid the rush. Shoes For The Whole Family—At All Prices. *TIS A FEAT TO FIT THE FEET. Store Open Evenings Until 8 P- M. LeCompte’s Shoe Shop THE PLACE TO BUY SHOES CAMBRIDGE. MARYLAND.