O THE SUNDAY CITIZEN, A811EV1LLE, N. C, DECEMBEJl 2, 191T. 17 Events of the Week as Seen by the Cartoonist Billy Borne I ii n I Wt$TtM .c.ttMi'CAcw i 3-. J r-v f A I V Expert Tells Why it is More Necessary During War Than in Peace Time. THE FEDERAL CHILD LABOR LAW f T 1 O. . n . l V4 umiea oiaces oenenu Dy Experience of Her Allies Across the Seas. (By James H. Collins.) Right In the midst of war, in Sep tember, a law went into effect which, at first stent, seemied to have no bear ing whatever upon our war problems. It was the Federal Child. Labor law. Which makes products of indus tries in which the labor of children is utilized subject to regulation if shipped in interstate or foreign com merce, and will have a very definite effect in states where social legisla tion has tended to lag a little behind Industrial development. The more one looks into the expe rience of European countries with child labor during the war, the more one sees that the work and welfare of children are distinctly a war matter, and something calling for even more attention during the excitement of hostilities than In the more orderly times of peace. England and France, I particularly, yielded to the apparent necessity of war time work, and grant certain "exemptions" under their laws for the protection of children, taking the latter out of school, per mitting them to work in factories, sanctioning night labor, and doing under the necessity for war produc tion what they would never have done In peace. After two years of this relaxation, a careful study of the ef fects upon the children and upon the country hae convinced the of ficials of both countries their peace tlmo regulations should he restored. JTflh, Wisdom Questioned. sr The wisdom of a Federal Child La bor law In this country has been questioned on several grounds. Critics I maintain that) work does not really harm children, and that if they are taken from the factories, mines, and other places covered by this new law Ihey will simply be idle. It is main tained that children's work is Indis pensable In certain fndustrles, especi ally In those with short seasons and In work of a light nature. It is especially urged that during war, with the necessity for the speeding up of our industries on every hand, the employment of children in the fac tories, canneries, and elsewhere Is justified that children should bear their share of the national burden as well as others. But it is In exactly this war emer gency that child labor abroad has failed! The employment of children did not Increase production, but diminished it, just as aiminianea production fol lowed the relaxation of wise indus trial regulations set for grown workers In peace times. "The experience of war time," said M. Albert Thames, (he French minis ter of munitions, "has only demon strated the necessity technically and economically of the labor law en acted before the war. In our legis lation, secured In time of peace, we shall find the conditions for a better and more Intense production during the war." France, after almost two years of war-time exemptions by which chil dren under 18 were allowed to work at night In special cases, restored the night-work prohibition for girl under is. England found th re laxation of child-labor regulations ex hausted and impaired the children and has been busy repairing the dam age done by wrong war measures. Even in Germany, a law-abiding coun try in peace times,, the relaxation of child-labor regulations led to unpar alleled lawlessness among children. Sound Measure. So our new Federal Child-Labor law is clearly a sound measure for war times. And there can be little question of Its wisdom as applied to normal conditions In peace times. This law provides that no child under 16 shall work In a mine or quarry and no child under 14 shall work in any mill, cannery, work shop, factory, or manufacturing es tablishment which ships Its products into interstate or foreign commerce. The working day of children between 14 and 16 years of age in factories may not be longer than eight hours, and they may not be employed be tween 7 p. m. and 6 a. m. Instead of prohibiting the employ ment of children in those terms, the federal law accomplishes the same result Indirectly by forbidding the shipment of goods in Interstate or foreign commerce from all establish ments where children were employed contrary to the federal law. Manu facturers and producers may protect themselves against prosecution by keetplne; on fHe federal certificate of age. or, in designated states, state cer ti.fica.1ws. showing th age of the chil dren in their employ. These certifi cates are Issued under simple and oon- France and England Both Realized the Mistake of Making "Exemptions" for Children to Work During the War, and Quickly Reversed Their Rules, Tightening Them Up to Before-the-War Strictness, and the New Federal Child Labor Law, it is Believed, Will Do More for the United States Than Any Other Measure Passed at the Last Session of Congress, in That it Will Aid in Conserving the Youth of the Land Production Stimulated Rather Than Retarded by the New Law. of the law has been delegated by the secretary of labor to the children's bureau of the department of labor, and la directly In charge of Mis Grace Abbott, a Chicago woman of long experience In labor and Indus trial problems. Enforcement of the law Is carried out by federal Inspectors. The law la designed, however, with a view to cooperation with local officials, and the full benefit expected from It can not be secured merely by complete federal enforcement. The final re sponsibility rests with the cltlsens of each locality, and demands a ser vice outslds of the law Itself. For to simply release the children from the factories is not enough. The real object of all prohibition of child labor is to Insure the child an education during its natural school period. To secure the real benefits of school the child must be well nourished and decently clothed and be given a chance In life in every other respect From a selfish busi ness standpoint regarding a child simply as a future producer of wealth for Itself, or for others, the best possi ble course ths course that will en able tblb child to earn the most money in the long run Is to keep It out of the factory until It has received adequate schooling and laid the foun dation of a healthy body. This has been found so true such hard-head ed business sense In communities which have had the widest expe rience in the employment of children venlent regulations. The enforcement and In labor and social matters gen erally, that those communities have voluntarily increased their human wealth by laws which keep the child In school until It Is 14 years of age or older, and have supplemented the public-school training with part time and vocational training courses in the very stores and factories where the children are at work. The chief misunderstanding of this new federal law Is found In those sec tions of ths country where communi ty experience has not been broad or extended enough to demonstrate its wisdom. The states where child la bor Is greatest also show the largest percentage of Illiteracy, and the chief benefit sought under the federal law Is to bring these states up to stand ards that have been found best In communities with broad experience. and to secure by oommunlty education and benefit the education and benefit. ought for the children. May Appear Radical. To a community which has not yet developed for Itself a local child la bor law on reasonable modern lines, the provisions of the federal law may appear radical. But in reality the federal law Is less drastic than the child labor laws of many states. At least 12 states fix standards which appear to be as high as those of the federal law, and In some re spects higher: Arkansas, Illinois. North Dakota, New York, Montana, Nebraska, Ohio, Oklahoma, and Wis consln. In every other state, except worm uarollna, New Mexico, and wy omlng. the 14-year age limit Is in n y The Heavens in December y By DR. C. S. BRAININ, of the Columbia University Observatory Staff. THE astronomers of America will be treated to a total eclipse of th- moon this month which will be -visible in .ts entirety throughout North America. Such an eclipse, while not of the same scientific value as the total eclipse of the sun. Is nevertheless of great interest, to the amateur astronomer in particular. It serves to impress upon his mini the won derful achievements of modern as tronomy in learning and reducing to mathematics the laws of the mo tions of the solar system and em phasizes to him the remarkable power of prophecy which science possesses. It serves as a new con firmation of the fact that the laws of nature still hold. Of course, the professional as tronomers are somewhat blase on this subject, and a mere eclipse of the moon evokes very little enthu siasm In most of them. However, there are soms, probably many, who take care not to miss this phe nomenon, In spite of the fact that they hardly expect to learn any thing new from the observation. It Is a mlllion-to-one chance that the calculations of the astronomi cal computer are correct to the second. But there Is something so Inspiring, so majestlo in the un wavering march of the shadow that one gets here as In few other naked-eye events In the heavens a real feeling of the truly awful movement of the oosmlo bodies through space. Circumstances of the Eclipse. The eclipse will take place on the night of December T-2i. Ws will rive the exact time data In eastern standard time (Washington, New York, eta) from which the corrections for the other standard time belts of the United States and Canada can easily be made. . At 1:64 In the morning the moon en ters the so-called penumbra, the partial or outer shadow, which will produce a hardly noticeable dark ening of the moon's disk. At five minutes past three the moon enters the umbra or complete shadow thrown by the earth, and this la really the beginning of the visible eclipse, for from then on the shadow creeps rapidly over the sur face of the moon, eating out more DECEMBER SKY Q o'clock 0 8 o'clock Dac (as INI HOLD MAP ABOVE HEAD VmU ?--JICOJAS LETTERS. vufmurwn MQDMEC. TONS a- L A a-st. . ! ESS m O xMASNITUOCi 4tuV 0 1ST h SJOWfm SATURN and more of the bright surface, until the total eclipse oommenoea at 4:31. The middle of the total eclipse Is at 4:46 and Its end at 4:56; the totality has thus lasted about IT minutes. The first bright patch now ap pears, and the shadow retreat as rapidly as it came on, until finally, at 6:27, the umbra has entirely left the . moon. The latter passe out of the penumbra finally at 1:3. The moat Interesting part to' watch,' of course, la from Just before the entrance Into the dark umbra until the and of the totality and th reappearance of th bright surface. There 1 no us la sitting out tH whole performanoe as list ed above. To change the above time data) to other standard time than th eastern, It la necessary to subtraot on hour for these who live In th,. central belt, to subtract two hour for those In th Rocky Mountain belt and three for those In th most westerly, or Pacific, time belt Ob servers In the easterly tip of North America, which I In th Intercolon ial or Atlantic standard time belt, add one hour to th above times. As an example, the middle of the clips wtll be at 1:46 by Atlantlo time, 4:46 by eastern time, t:46 by central time, 1:46 by Rocky Moun tain Ume, and finally, 1:46 by Pa olflo time. The phenomenon I visible over an entire hemlaphsre at practically the same Instant, for ev ery person who has ths moon above hi horlson win be able to see It. Iiunar and Solar Eclipses. Th lay reader will probably be very much surprised to learn that th lunar eclipse la resjly a rarer phenomenon than the less often observed- solar. This I true In th actual number of occurrences, but th intrinsic difference between th two phenomena make th solas apparently the rarer, Th differ ence lies In the fact that, as stated above, a lunar eclipse, when It hap pens, Is visible to the inhabitants of an entire hemisphere, whereas a solar eclipse Is visible only to a rather limited area. The sun is ths source of Its own light, but the moon shines by re flected glory only. At the time of a lunar eclipse the earth Interposes Its bulk between the sun and the moon, thus cutting off the moon's light entirely, and any person sit uated In that hemisphere where It is night at that particular instant will have the eclipse. The moon's surface Is entirely dark, except for the very weak "earthshlne," which Is sunlight reflected from the earth's surface to th moon and back again to us. In the case of the solar eclipse ths moon gets In between us and the sun, and for those whose view of the sun Is Intercepted there Is an eclipse, 1. e , for those who are in the shadow path of ths moon. Because of the relative distances of the sun, moon and earth, this shadow of the moon never covers a very large area of earth, partic ularly the darker part of the shadow. Sometimes, when the moon Is relatively far away, the tip of the umbra or full shadow doe not quite reach th earth, but the penumbra or partial shadow does. In this case we have what Is called an annular or ring-shaped eclipse of the sun. .There will be places on the earth where the sun will be seen as a brilliant ring with the moon cutting off a cen tral disk.- Such an eclipse will also happen this month, on the 14th, but unfortunately It will not be visible In this country at all. The best place to observe It Is at the south pole. Th United States win be treated to a real total solar oollps next year on June 6. Th location which will be favored lie along a line extending diagonally across th oountry from north-west to south-east. We shall before long publish a map of th eclipse and oertatn other data Indispensable to th amateur astronomer who I to observe this, the moat marvelous spectacle In th world. part established by state law. How ever, in California, Colorado, Dela ware. District of Columbia, Georgia, Idaho, Maryland, Oregon, Virginia, and Washington, the age limit un der which children, and especially boys may be employed is variously reduced by exemptions for specific Industries, such as canning, and by poverty and other exemptions. In 20 states and the District of Colum bia the state law fixes an eight-hour day for children between 14 and 16 years of age. In Its provisions against night work by children, the federal law comes nearer to a national standard than m any other renoect For 41 states have a prohibition of night work for children substantially the same as that contained In the federal act. In the states where this law will bring the greatest benefits ths night employ ment of children has been extensive. The principal machinery for enforc ing the law Is that under which age ertlflcates are Issued. When employ ers, parents, and children observe the simple regulations governing these age certificates, the law Is largely antomatlc in its operation. These certificates are issued by authorities designated for that purpose, upon the application by the child desiring em- j ployment, accompanied by Its parents, guardian, or custodian, with approved documentary evidence of age. The child must !be fourteen years or over If "employment Is contemplated in a mill, cannery, workshop, or manu 'faoturtng establishment, and must be between sixteen and seventeen years of age for employment In or aibout a mtn or auarry. According to the rules and regulations adopted by the United Stales Child Labor boards certificates must contain the following dmfonmatlon: "N 1 Name of child. 2. Place ana date or Dirtn or cnna together with statement of evidence on which this is based, except when a physician's certificate of physical age Is accepted by the Issuing officer, in which case physical age shall be shown. 3. Sex and color. 4. Slgnlture of child. 5. Name and address of child's par ent, guardian, or custodian. 6. Signature of Issuing officer. 7. Date and place of Issuance. Evidence as to age consists of one of the following-named proofs: (a) A birth certificate, or attested transcript thereof. Issued by a regis trar or vital statistics of other officer charged with the duty of recording births. (b) A record of baptism, or a certi ficate or attested transcript thereof showing ths date of birth and place of baptism of the child. (c) A bona ftde contemiporar" rec ord of the date and place of the child's birth kept in th Bible in which the records of the births in the family I of the child are preserved, or other documentary evidence satisfactory to the secretary of labor or such person as he may designate, such as a passport showing the age of the child, a certificate of arrival in the United States Issued by the United States Immigration officers and showing the age of the child, or a life Insurance policy; provided that such other sat isfactory documentary evidence has been In existence at least one year prior to the time H Is offered In evi dence; and provided further that a school record or a parent's, guar dian', or custodian's affidavit, certifi cate, or other written statement of age shall not be accepted except as openifled In paragraph (b). (d) A certificate signed by a public health physician or a public-school physician, specifying what, in the opinion of such physician. Is the phys ical age of the child; such certifi cate shall show the height and weight of the child and other facts concern ing its physical development revealed by such examination and upon which the opinion of the physician as to the physical age of Che child Is based. A parent's, guardian's, or custodian's certificate as to the age of the child and a record of age as glvan on ths register of th school which ths child first attended, or In the school census, if obtainable, shall be submitted with the physician's certificate showing phvatcal eg. Th officer Issuing the age certificate for a child shall require th evidence of age specified In subdivision (a) In preference to that specified in any subsequent subdivision, unless he shall reeelve and fil evidence that th 4- ceding subdivision or subdivisions can not be obtained. It Is Impossible to say with any ac curacy how many children have been taken out of Industry by this law. In those states where standards of age and hours of work for children are higher than under the Federal law, no children are affected, of course. But the standards in a large number of states are below those of the Federal law and on the ban is of figures of the thirteenth census, now more than seven years old. It Is estimated that the 27,022 children under fourteen years df age who were employed In manu facturing eistaibl1sh.ments have been released, and that the 17,667 chil dren under sixteen years of age who were reported working In mines and quarries are no longer employed at that work. No one can eay how many of the children between fourteen and sixteen who have been employed for ten and eleven and over twelve hours a day In the past will not be permitted to work more than Sight hour under the new law. In 1910 there were 119, 690 of these children between four teen and sixteen emiployed In states where they were not protected by an eight-hour law. These census figures do not include the large number of children that have worked during the busy months of August and September In canneries and other seasonal industries. Includes Canneries. The Federal law specifically Includes canneries, while thess are exempt un der the State child-labor laws of Cali fornia, Maryland, Delaware, Michigan, Virginia, and Indiana staites which have in other respects good standards. Roughly, apeaJdng. at least 160.000 child workers have been released or benefited under this law. and perhaps many thousands more. That tho Fed eral Child Ijabor law Is wise and In keeping with-national conservation of our human resources, and especially thait It la Justified during such a crisis as that of the war. Is shown by the fact that nine states have strength ened their standards in this matter during the past few months since the declaration of war in lAjprll. Those states are Arkansas, Illinois, Kansas. North Carolina, Oklahoma, Tennessee. Texas, Vermont and Wis consin. That higher regulations ifor child workers are necessary as a matter of general experience Is shown In the fact that these states are widely sep arated, and therefore It Is clear that they are nroeeiting by legislation the demand for a higher national stand ard. Soon after flhe law went Into effect the children's bureau received a com plaint from a state commissioner of laJbor stating that children were em ployed on a certain governmnt reservation. They were working in restaurants, laundries and similar - tabluihments not enraged In Inter state commerce, to which therefore the United States Child Labor act does not apply. The complaint was brought to the attention of the secretary of war, who. In order to make conditions in army forts and post conform to the standards laid down by the United States OhlM Lobor aot. Issued the fol lowing Instruction through the ad jutant-general. 1. That on rovermnemt reserva tions children under fourteen years of age are not to be emiployed. 2. That enwtfren between fourteen and sixteen years of age are not to be employed (a) more than sight hours in any workday, (b) more than six day a week, (c) before 6 a. m. or after 7 p. m. 1. In order to enforce these stand ards it Is desired that certificates be demanded and kerpt on file for every child between fourteen and sixteen. I How Hours Are Fixed. 4. In determining whehr cMI. dren between Wounteen and sixteen have been employed more than eight hours in any day the hour of m ployment shall be oomputsd from th tim tho ohUd ts required or per mitted or suffered to be at th plane of employment up to th. time win en he leaves off work for th day, elusive of a alngl continuous period of a deftntt length of time d urine; which the child 1 off work and not subject to call. AH employers on government reservation small be re quired to keep a dally lm record showing; the hours of euraploymen for each and every child between four teen and sixteen year of ago. Th Federal Child Labor law does not affect children on th (arm di rectly, but Indirectly 4t t expected that It will help th country boys and girls, especially In those section where th greatest problem of Illiter acy exists. .For under It higher standard th nation can not long per mit country boy and girls to grow up untaught while children In the Indus trial center are benefiting by better standards. This new lam will coat money. , It should mean wvin on th cart of all peopl. It should moan mor raxes for more schools and better school. - It should mean extended efforts In communities where schools ars not operated on full time, where teach ers are not well paid nor schools well quipped, and where povertv neoessl. tales . scholarships and other ex traneous aid to th child. But this Is exactly the effect that was hoped for when th law was advocated and passed -to take the children out of th factories and shop in th years when they should be getting a train ing which will fit them to be real pro ducer, and to put thetn into th schools. If th schools or not ade quate, then they must be mod bet ter. Tho very fact that thr are not adequate shows that tho law was needed In that oomsminlty. ' Our whole American standards of living la based upon universal educa tion and universal opportunities. Thl law should grade up to a national standard those compa rati voJ y few sections df th country wher Amerl- . cans have apparently forgoMen Aimer can ldeala It send th children back Into the schools, and it will euro ly create better schools where they are needed. For there ho seldom . been a time or a place tai this country where the need for adequate educa tional i facilities, clearly pointed out, did not meet with an tmmedtat re sponse. SEVEN SENTENCE SERMONS. Llffs Is a casket, not precious In it self, but valuable In proportion to , what fortune, or industry or vdrtu has placed within it Land or. , It is safer to trust your eye than your ears when a man argue reli gion while his wife carries m th water. "Rom's Horn." To thine own self be trusx And It must follow as th n light the day t Thou canst not then be AUm to SJWJ man. fihakeepear. . An educated man in a man who can do what he ought to do when h ought to do it whether ho want to . do it or not Nicholas Murray But ler. Our deeds determine us a weB as w determime our deeds.-1-Oeorg Eliot None but God ts worthy of th whole offering of man. Phillips ' Brooks. Doctor Tells How To Sfrenglhen Eyesight 50 per cent In One Week's Time In Many Instances A Free Prescription Ton Can Have Filled and Use at Home. Philadelphia, Pa. Do you wear glasses? Are you a victim of eye strain or othsr eye weaknesses T If so, you will be glad to know that accord ing to Dr. Lewi there I real hop for you. Many whose eyes were fail ing say they have had their eyes re stored through th principle of this wonderful free prescription. One man says, aftsr trying it: "I waa almost blind; could not see to read at an. Now I can read everything without any glasses and my eyes do not water any mora At nignt tney would pain dreadfully: now they feel fine all the. time. It waa Ilk a miracle to me." I A lady who used It says: "Th at- mospnsr seemea nasy wnn or wiw oat glasses, but after using this pre spared th trouble and expense of ever getting glasses. Eye trouble of many descriptions may be wonderfully bene fited by following the simple rules.' Here Is the prescription: Go to any active drug store and get a bottle of Bon-Opto tablet. Drop one Bon-Opto , tablet In a fourth of a glass of water and allow to dissolve. With thl liquid : bathe th eye two to four time dolly. Ton should notice your eye dear up perceptibly right from the start and Inflammation will quickly disappear. If your eyes ar bothering you, even ' utti. tak steps to save tnem now before it i too lata. Many hopelessly blind might havs been saved If they had cored for their eye In time. . Hotel Another marines nosh las te wami ths tbooe article vu submitted, ssidi "Boe-OpW is a very iwserkable icaMdy. Ha eonstitMBt Incredirata era wll kaewa to estlmat ere spec ie. Dill uw "' " - ,Vt T.- ecripiton for fifteen days everything mtmctmt, it to iZZm JZSiM caa even reaa nne MDerwntls seems clear. 1 orlnt without gli that thousands who now discard ana muiuiaaes pari wiu om motw v, rridsno of age required try th pre- strengthen their era so as to belU aranta it to stracthea eveiisM 11 is oeueveu er wresa tne mom t. it ess as eouiiwd Tmm ids who wear glasses eon d dracr d W acaf tbe nrr fcw prrp them In a reasonable time ftf ' ''" '. P".1. !T"y ' n.r, Mil h ilili ta. ' uaUx. Hbsotdiatasirtty Adv-t J