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ran ATLANTA GEORGIAN AND NEWS: WEDNESDAY, DECEMBER 13. i»ii.
THE ATLANTA GEORGIAN
(AND NEWS)
F. L. SEELY. Publisher.
EOWIN CAMP. Managing Editor.
Published Every Afternoon
(Except Sunda*-)
By THE GEORGIAN COMPANY
At 20 E. Alabama St., Atlanta. Ga.
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know that he is backet], not by
bosses and boodle, but by the
endorsement of millions of voters.
Great is the. presidential pri
mary. Let its paths be made
smooth. i
Em.red as second-class master at ths
postofle* at Atlanta. Ga.. under the act
«r March S. 187?.
R. Palmer. Foreign Traveling Kepre-
R'ntatlve. Address, care Tb* Georgian,
Atlanta, Ga.
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TO JANE AUSTEN.
O lltllc world «o trim and flat,
Where Fate mu»t ,tralghten hi* cravat,
And Death himself must uie the met,
Ere they could entrance golnl
Thine earth a box of mignonette,
A bird-cage In a window eot,
A shelved and ehapely cabinet,
Inviolable Jane!
O eye of eagle and of mole.
Thou ahrewd and penetrating tout,
Yet off thy little Englfeh knoll^
So Impotent and veins
Satlrlc-u-yet beneath thy glee
An orgy of propriety.
Thou rlotest In decency,
Invulnerable Janel
Wa* e’er a keen, eatlrle bent
So quaintly, comically blent
With smug and purring self.content.
And homiletic etraln?
A Puck In cassock or a nun
In motley—art thou both or onef
0 frolic lore, O surpllced fun,
Inexplicable Janel
What pen could draw thee, line by line.
With art Ironic and benign,
And truth unflawed; what pen but thine
O woman' aage and sane?
1 would thla gladdened world might aee
Another Jane to laugh lit thee,
Rare target for rare archery,
Irrevocable ■Janel *"■
Lightly thru time thy figure tripe,
Skirt lilted where the. highway dipt.
Thy brow now crinkled, now thy irpi,
* As mirth'rule,-or disdain: ■ t Vi
The barred and bolted centurlee
Thou fronteat with unerring keya,
The "Park,” the "Abbey,” "Emma”—
these
Shall swift admission galnt
And. If the porter claim a fae,
Fling “Pride” or “Senalbllltyi”
The flattered door ahall ope for thee,
Imperlahable Janet
—From The'Atlantle Monthly.
Nominating a President.
The time when a president.was
nominated by a' machine-made,
boss-ridden national convention
made up of delegates chosen by
machine-made, boss-ridden state
conventions has gone, or is fast
going.
The people are now thorough
ly acquainted with tho tricks
nnd .machinations of sueli^ con
ventions. They know how often
in the past their rights have bfeen
trampled upon and their will
turned aside for the promotion
of private interests.
Tho presidential primary is
coming to supplant tho old state
convention, and delegates that
are to be chosen thereby will
be commissioned to do the will
of the people and not the will
of the bosses.
i In a number of states presi
dential primaries are prescribed
by low. In still larger number
party organizations have provid
ed for the expression of the indi
vidual voter. The state Demo
cratic executive committee of
Georgia, in line with this policy,
have declared for a presidential
primary next summer—an action
that meets with the approval of
the entire commonwealth.
In this connection, the doinga
of the national Republican com
mittee at its recent meeting in
Washington are significant. That
committee voted for primaries to
be held in those states where
such primaries arc prescribed by
law.' but in other states it per-
milted the old convention plan to
stand.
The Democrats should make no
mistake either thru their national
organization or thru the action of
their state committees. The pri
mary plan of selecting delegates
to the national convention ahould
be adhered to persiatently and
consistently. •
A Democratic presidential can
didate chosen by the people in
stead of the politicians will start
out with a big advantage In the
race. He will occupy at once a
high place in the confidence of
'h" nation, for the nation will
Action on the Passport
Question.
A Washington dispatch states
that the Sulzer resolution Mo -1 ab
rogate the treaty of 1832 between
United States and Russia has
been favorably reported by the
house committee on foreign af
fairs.
This is good so far as it goes,
but it must go farther.
The movement to terminate the
treaty with . Russia» because of
the latter’s high-handed viola
tion of it has reached the com
mittee approval stage before.
Wjiat is needed now is that it
be adopted by the house and
senate and approved by the presi
dent, and thus become the act of
the United States.
The treaty of 1832 declares
that the subjects of the two
countries shall have reciprocal
liberty of commerce, navigation
and place of residence, and shall
enjoy the same security nnd pro
tection as. natives of tho country
wherein they reside “on condi
tion of their submitting to tho
laws and ordinances there' pre
vailing and particularly to the
regulations concerning com
merce.”
Russia has twisted the mean
ing of the condition quoted in
the foregoing paragraph all out
of its original bearing and sig
nificance, and is using it to sad
dle upon Jewish American citi
zens traveling in Russia all the
injustices and. outrages that it
practices on itt-own .Jewish sub
jects.
The thing is intolerable—
American citizens discriminated
against' because of their relig
ious faith. It is repugnant to
one of tho central ideas upon
which our republic was founded
—namely, that of religious lib
erty.-
For practically half a century
Russia has . been violating tho
treaty. Tho United States has
protested, but to no avail. Tho
violation continues.
The time has come for action.
For tl)e sake of its own self-re
spect and for the protection of
its citizens this country can not
longer continue to be n party
to a treaty which it keeps in
f ood faith and Russia wantonly
isregards.
Time Measures of
Trans-Continental Flight.
Calbraith P. Rodgers, tho aviator,
last Sunday finished his cross-
continent Right from Sheepshead
Bay, N. Y., to. Long Beach, Cal.
When he arrived at Long Beach
he announced with much prido
the fact that he had made tho
trip in three days, ten hours and
fourteen minutes, actual dying
time.
His was indeed a pride-provok
ing achievement, and wo would
not detract one iota from it. Tho
pioneer in any line of accom
plishment deserves high honor.
But while his actual time in
the air was less than four days,
the actual time in making the en
tire trip was—all the autumn.
And thq difference between
three days, ten hours and four
teen minutes and all the autumn
is only another way of measuring
the weakness of the aeroplane ns
a consistent means of transporta
tion and of depicting the chief
frailty of aviators.
Most of the span of time mfeas-
ured by this difference was spent
by Rodgers in repairing break
downs in his machine and in re
cuperating in the hospitals from
injuries to himself received as
the result of these breakdowns.
The chief fault of the aeroplane
is the flimsy character of its
construction. Tho chief fault of
aviators is their fondness for go
ing after records and trying dare
devil feats, regardless of the risk
to life and limb.
Another trans-continental flight
before improvements in construc
tion have enabled the neroplane to
shorten very much the gap be
tween actual flying time and the
total time consumed would be
folly.
It is a great thing to have
made the coast-to-coast flight in
less than three days flying time.
But it would be a greater
tiling to perfect the aeroplane to
such a degree that any ordinarily
skillful aviator could make the
trip in twenty days total time
without any stop-overs at repair
shops and hospitals.
Every mine disaster should mean tha
taklns of greater precaution* for tha
protection of life at other mines It
ought to. but It doein't. Greed makes
countless thousands mourn. x
UNCLE WALT ^ PHILOSOPHER
A stately squash grew on a vine that hung- upon a fence,
and,it.was large and smooth and fine, and sold-for seven cents.
, The buyer put it in a crate and shipped it off to town; the
-r ^railway charged ten cents for freight, and got
HIGH COST tHc money down. Then divers kinds of middle-
' men passed that old squash along, and each on!
OF LIVING got a rake-off then, in which they saw no wrong.
■ ‘ • The jobber to tho grocer sold that squash one
autumn clay, and’it.was scarred and bruised and old, and tend
ing to decay. The farmer man who raised that squash to town
came on his wheel; at dinner time he said: “B’jjosh, I’ll
have a good square meal!” So to a restaurant he sped, and
ate some squash on ice, and then he stood upon his head when
he was told the price. .“Your price on squashes makes me
hotl” he cried; “your game is bunk! I’d sell a wagonload
for what you charged me for that chunk!” Our eyes with
teardrops are. awash; we’re viewing with alarm; for when we
go to buy a squash, we have to buy a farm.
Copyright, 1911, by George Matthew Adams.
^ WALT MASON.
WILL GET MICHIGAN
i
Representative Sweet Says the
Princetonian Has Hold on
Democracy of State.
' ~ J
TheBuj'inessDoctor
m
RoQFufkerj'on
TO APB MARK RBCMTBOBt
Acreage Tax and Compulsory Education Suggested
For Raising Price of Cotton
Editor Tho Georgian:
H. S. Tucker, n farmer and a con
stituent of mine, came to town a few
days ago and told me of a plan that
had evolved In his mind to reduce cot;
ton acreage and increase the price.
Briefly stated, his plan was this:
Pass a law Imposing a tax of ten
cents per acre up to and including ten
acres, allowing ten acres to the horse,
and *5 per acre In excess of ten acres
up to and Including twelve acres, and
125 per acre In excess of twelve acres.
His Idea was (hat the ten cents per
acre would'at least pay an. officer for
measuring tho ground, and should
there bo any money left arising from
this tax, let, It be applied to the school
fund.
Mr, Tucker asked mo to Introduce a
bill of this character at the next session
of tho legislature.
I explained to Mr. Tucker that, while
I thought there was merit in his sug
gestion, Ills procedure was wrong, that
tha thing to do was to pass a. resolu
tion memorialising tho other cotton
growing states to Join-Georgia In such
a law. •
I then addressed a letter to • Mr.
Charles S. Barrett, president of the
Farmers union, telling .him of Mr
Tucker’s suggestion, and asked him for
an expression. He replied that a com
pulsory educational law might help to
ralso the price of cotton.
I state a philosophy and a fact when
I say that the' present price of cotton
Is below the cost of production, and,
since It Is the South's money crop,
every Southerner ought to be Interest
ed In tho farmer getting a fair return
for his cotton.
I have been a merchant for 32 years,
and I know that the price of our raw
cotton has vtrr Uttla to do with tho
price of manufactured goods.
In addition to being a merchant, I
am a farmer ns well, and If any one
has a better means of solving the
problem of securing to the farmers a
better return for their cotton, let It be
known.
To my m-ay of thinking Messrs.
Tucker and Barrett have tho best so
lution I ever read.
I do not mean to Intimate here that
Mr. Barrett suggests to pass a com-
The following Is from The Washing
ton Herald:
"Count Michigan, with 28 delegates
In the Democratic national convention,
for Woodrow Wilson, of New Jersey,”
was the preliminary prediction put
forth by Edwin F. Sweet, one of the two
Democratic members of the house from
Michigan, when he arrived lp Washing
ton!
"Wilson, more than any other Demo,
crat mentioned for president, has a hold
upon our Michigan Democracy. If, as
seems apparent now. President Taft Is
to be the Republican candidate, Wilson
will receive many Republican votes In
Michigan, and for that matter, in many
other states."
"And what can you promise Wilson
In Michigan even if he Is nominated?"
was asked of Representative Sweet.
"Well, we mado a good Democratic
showing last year," said Sweet, “and we
ought to do even better a year hence.
We elected two Democratic members of
the house In Republican districts, Do-
remus. In Detroit, and myself. There Is
hope for gaining other districts next
year, and the state itself Is not hope
less.”
pulsory educational law to boost cotton,
in my county I enn walk up and lay ml
Anger on men that have made serfs
and servants of their boys, using them
to make cotton, and giving them no
educational advantages. This Is what
Mr. Barrett means: That If the boys
and girls were In school, where they
ought to be, there would he fewer to
make cotton, and would have the effect
of enhancing the price.
The Georgian haa been the champion
of a compulsory educational law for
some time, and for this has won the
plaudits of those who want to see all of
Georgia’s boys get an education.
I think now that I wlll_ Introduce the
resolution at the next session of the
legislature, nnd I hope there will be
"something doing” In the other.
Yours truly,
Lumber City. MATT COOK.
BELIEVE ME!
"Vow would pay a thousand dollars for the secret of his success ..„ u
you?" the Business Doctor smiled cynically. “After you had Bal'd 1,,,
money you would feel that you had been sw indled. 1 know that man lntl
jiiately. have conferred with him si nr,"
the day he opened his store, and have
watched his few thousand dollars of
original capital-grow Into what he'has
now. a thriving, enterprising store that
Is the envy of yon and every man In his
line. Yet. Il l tell you. as I wll " ,t
real secret of that man's success. v„„
will either not believe me or you \\iii
not profit by the advice
7t e * as doncs noth lng t»at you d,.
not know as wen as he does. The onlv
difference between his system r'Z
yours Is that he doe s as wen as
knows how and you do not. He has tha!
bulldog tenacity which hangs on
what he knows is right. H e makes sure
he Is right and then goes ahead and
keeps going. That's his secret' n,
never stops. The history of his bust-
ness Is the history of every sucessful
retail business on earth. Ho has slm.
ply taken the well-defined buslnr..
laws and carried them out, never stoo.
ping for a single Instant
"First of all, he is a good advertiser. Not a big advertiser, not an er
ratlc advertiser, but a steady plugger. who has. never let un for an Instant"
There lias never been anything sensational about hls advertisements Ms-
have never seen him use a shabby "r worn-out cut or one that did not dn
entire Justice to the article It represented. You have never seen him
an advertisement that was not set both legibly nnd artistically
“I happen to know that his copy Is carefully thought out at least »
month before It Is used. In this way it is made seasonable, and you have
never seen one of hls advertisements on a Thanksgiving 8t. Valentin.',
day or any other day that It did not carry In It some sentiment or snm.
llttla touch of tho spirit of the occasion. He has discovered that news
paper space i« too valuable to waste with poorly written copy.
“He simply talks plain common sense and avoids anything but nlaln
onallty argument*. He Inis laid a foundation for absolute 1,.-
has never made n promise or offered a pro: nslilon In the newspaper* thsi
was not carried out to the letter In hls store. The quality of the merchsa
dise and the character of tho service have ever lived up to the last leti«
of the-advertising. • ■ « last tetter
“To my persona! knowledge nothing startling happened In hls ators
when this line of advertising was first published. There was no mad rush
to get Into hls place and buy hls goods, yet in a few months hls business
began to Increase, and It has grown steadily from the day the store »«i
opened, and the advertising has grown with It.- I happen to know that he
has done more tho first seven months of this year than he had ever don.
before In any whole year of hls business existence.
"Hls establishment is-a perfect example of sane, sober and conservative
advertising. This will bring business as surely as sunshine and rsln will
bring green grass. Steady, sane advertising In good dally papers Is not an
experiment. It Is a settled fact, and where such advertising does not bring
results, then the fault Is In the store, and not In the advertising. Either
the store Is not living up to the advertising, the prices of tho goods sre
too high, or else the quality Is not up to the quality that other -merchsnti
are giving at the same prices.
"This Is hls great secret. Ho knew these methods would win and he
has used them every minute. There Is hip secret."
TWENTY WORLD-MAKERS
By ELBERT HUBBARD
■j-
SNAPSHOTS. ON PROHIBITION
By REV. A. C. WARD. D.D.
Dr. Alexander Lambert, visiting physi
cian to Bellavua hospital and professor In
Cornell university, takes tha position
that alcohol la not a stimulant, but a nar
cotic. and that It paralyses the functions
evan when It appears to stimulate.
Mayor Henna, of Dee Moines, Iowa,
has appointed fifteen cltlien* who are to
be known as the "Vice Commission.
This commlsaion Is to divide Iteelf Into
various parte and Investigate the "vice
conditions of that city and report to the
mayor.
The feet that the liquor business kappa
„.i fighting the taw I* proof enough in
Itself that the traffic Is had and not good.
The dry goods and grocery trades do not
keep up a constant light against any taw.
Why does the liquor traffic alone always
oppose the law 7
Illinois la on the eve of a prohibition
battle. The Anti-Saloon league Intends
to precipitate the county local option
Issue Into the primary for governor.
spring of the saloon. Wherever saloons
have ever existed nr do now exist there
will be found Wind tigers. If a place
has never had a saloon it ta not likely to
have blind tigers.
rid of blind tigers by
■■ft ng In local
open i
The trustees of East Liverpool In mak
ing up their budget for expenses during
the coming year made no provision for
the "Pooe fund." When asked why this
provision was not made a member of the
hoard said "there Is no need for a poor
fund. East Liverpool la a dry town.''
A man by the name of Munxlnger was
recently arrested In St. Louie for abusing
hls nine-year-old boy. When the hoy
wee Informed that hla father had been
committed to the Jail ha said, "I am glad
because father can't get any more hear."
The saloonkeepers have frequently been
asked to give a good reason for the ex
istence of the saloon*. So far the only
argument has been that the saloons are
money-makers for the saloonkeeper*.
That is all there is In It.
The saloon counties of Texas during
the year* l*OT-i»o* had five times me
many murders, population considered, as
the prohibition counties had during the
same period.
Oakland county. Michigan. Is a good II-
lustratlon of the coat of saloons In a
community. Sheriff Tlpps’ bill against
the county for carepf prisoners Is larger
than ever before. The oil! Is *3,00* more
this year than It was last year and ts
four times as much as the sheriff's bill
under prohibition.
Now that California has adopted wom
an's- suffrage we have five states that
give full franchise to women, vis:
California. Npw
vote out liquor.
ntnuiic xMtiorj, wji. n. result oi my
investigations I believe that drink causes
serious financial loss to both employer
and employee and that It results tn lower
wages to the employees.”
The talk of the liquor crowd that the
taxes are so much higher In town* with
out saloons than they are In towns with
saloons Is all rot. There Is absolutely
no foundation for the statement.
an advertisement
Few saloonkeepers run their saloons be
cause they love the buelnesi. Many of
rid of him as soon as possible.
In a previous article Mr. Hubbard
dissented from Andrew Carnegie as to
the twenty greatest men, and how fur
nishes a list of hls own.
1. Moses, who formulated a religion
founded on a sanitary common aenso
code, and fused religion with life.
2. Pericles, who took the treasure of
Delos—a fund raised for war purposes
—and used if to build the most beauti
ful city the world has ever seen. Tho
Influence of Pericles In architecture,
sculpture, oratory,, the drama, physical
culture, still endures and animates and
Inspires every worker In the arts.
3. Aristotle, the world's first scientist,
to whom very much of our MlaMlfla
terminology now traces: the man who
organized the first herbarium, the first
geological collection, the first zoologlcul
garden and who taught the world that
health, sanity and happiness were to
be obtained only thru an understanding
and a love of nature. , .
The world has not nearly caught up
with Aristotle. Besides being the
world's first scientist, Aristotle was
tho world’s first school teacher. Hls
teaching was founded on the Idea of
making nil study pleasurable—as all
life should be. He led tha way for
Frobel.
4. Michael Angelo, a workingman
who sanctified manual labor; the first
of modern architects; a poet, a painter,
a sculptor, an engineer, who lived a
long, happy and useful life. Millions
upon millions of simple folk look upon
hls work today and are uplifted by It.
The dome of the capltot at Washing
ton Is patterned after the dome of St.
bu Ht by Michael Angelo, and
all domes trace a pedigree to Michael
. _ . - - 1-1-f-l-I'
| Growth and Progress |
of the New South j
I**?. new Industries
i 0 ”™ 1 '"‘ho So >' th for the week
ending December 7, as reported to
The Manufacturers Record:
E. O. Painter Fertilizer Company,
.Jacksonville, FIa„ awarded contract
buiidrn 1 ^ 2l ?,- roo c t „,, ml i , 3 0. l 0 , 5S ,,r . u o ct ' o b n .
;:fa q ct 1 u P rmgTertlI™, a r Ch,nery ,or mani ”
*r Riverside Coal and Iron Company,
ri^elonhurz. Ky, was Incorporated
coal* land c,p t * 1 etock to develop
f'i, I i e ™£ l,cult -9 0 I np * n> '' Oklahoma
v*y> Qk!a. t awarded contract for con*
•tructlng 140x150*foot 5-story rein*
forced concrete and brick hulldlmr
costing 1160,000, to be equipped wUh
♦lOOMO mach,n * ry coa'lng*about
• t ?°fton States Wagon Company,
tiannnn Incorporated with T
1100,000 capital stock to manufacture . *
Renton Colony Company. Ran An- -r
‘nnlo. Texas, purchased 10,000 acres • •
land and plans..
**.1 development for growing • ■
alfalfa, cltru* fruits, etc. ..
Indian River Land and Fruit Com- ■ ■
pany, Port Pierce. Fla., was char
tered with *700,000 capital stock to
develop fruit lands.
Riaal Hemp and Development Com-
’ ’ J £ c te! nvme ' Wl» erect a
• > *5,000 building and Install *8,000
■ ■ electric power equipment, spinning
machinery, etc., for dally output of
three tone of lath yarn and rope.
E. B. Norman ft Co., Louisville.
Ky., will develop 21.000 acres of tlm
her"land n«r oily'nidreT’LsL: 1 he• !!
oonftructlon of double band mill
with dally capacity of 70,000 feet of
lumber.
Southern Green Slate Company,
^tlatu*' Oa-. was Incorporated with
*100,000 capital stock end purchased
for development 17* scree of elate
and. shale land.
r
bui
icorporated with ■ ■
acres of "orchard land! oTwlflch 6 ^# • '•
acres *r* now bearing. .,
Southern^ Manufacturing Company, • •
bartered with • •
capital stock
Atlanta. Ga., was
uary first.
Southern Menhaden Company,
J »rksonrille^ Fla., was Incorporated
with **00.000 capital stock to catch
menhaden fish and manufacture ou.
fertilizer, etc.
Rockmart Brick and Slate Com-
I*"?'-, ,(•?**"'*rL pf • w “ organized
with *100.000 capital stock to menu-
• . Picture vitrified brick: general of-
• • fices at Augusta, Ga.
Angelo. Hls work tnsplrez every lover
of art and every builder who strives for
the Ideal.
5. Columbus, who gave the world _
continent, even tho he dldd In chains.
6. Thomas Jefferson, who taught ths
principles of a republican form of gov
ernment, founded our public school sys
tem, which he designed should be based
on the honor system; who Introduced
Greek architecture into America; a man
singularly patient, creative, loving, gen
erous anil with whom the world has not
yet nearly caught up. The only Demo,
crat the world has ever seen.
7. Charles Darwin, discoverer and
teacher of evolution, who has changed
the complexion of every orthodox re
ligious sect.
8. Franklin, dlzcoverer. Inventor, bus-
Inoss man, financier, diplomat, phllin
throplst.
!>. Lincoln, the statesman.
10. Edison, appllcr of electricity and
common sense.
11. Watt, practical inventor of the
steam engine.
12. Gutenberg, who Invented printing.
13. Bell, the first Inventor of the tele,
phone.
14. Arkwright, Inventor of cotton
spinning machinery.
15. Hargreaves, inventor of the spin,
nlng Jenny.
16. Stephenson. Inventor of tht loco
motive.
17. Perry G. Holden, who, thru ths se
lection of seed corn, has shown ths
world how to double Its productive
wealth per acre. ,,
18. George Westinghouse, Inventor ol
over 1,500 electric and mechanical ap
pliances.
19. Frederick Frobel, thru whole
teaching corporal punishment has been
abandoned, and who gave the world •
new system of education.
20. Adam Smith, author of The
Wealth of Nations," the first hook that
treats economics as a science.
All of these twenty men I have named
exerted a positive beneficial Influence
upon mankind, which grows In extern
as the years pass. They were world
factors—epoch launcher*—and ctn wen
be called the twenty men who were
world-makers.
Army-Navy Orders
A nd Movements of Vesselsj
Washington, Doc. 12*—Tha followlni
orders have been Issued:
Army ’ Orders.
Caplafn I. Newell, unazzlgned. Is as
signed to tho Tiycmy-Wecond Infantry
Naval Ordsro.
Lieutenant Commander N. L. Jo« !
from the North Dakota to navy
partment, Washington.
Lieutenant S. W. Wallace, from
Minnesota to the Astatic llatlon-
Lieutenant R. C. MacFall. from ■»
Delaware to the Newport News Sh>p
building and Dry Dock Company.
port News, Va. . .
Lieutenant J. S. Dowell. Jr., and
tenant A. L. Brystol. Jr., fr"?. , 0
Mayflower. January 2, and
duty os naval attaches of the a®
lean embassy, Berlin. , ..
Movements of Naval Ve***^^
Arrived—Yorktown, at Amapala- • .
Hampshire, at navy yard. New p, r .
Drayton, McCall, Paulding, Tl' r J n ,io«
kins. Mayrant. Sterrett.
and Burrows, at Charleston, t
at Hilo. Hawaii; Maryland, at lu ^
Peoria, at Charleston;
Shanghai; El Cano, at Klu KUn*.
tuxent nnd Potomac, at Pensa
Sailed—Patterson. Ammen. T f
Walker and Vulcan, from Be* 1
Hampton Roads; Florida, from 1
tanamo for Pensacola.
Perfectly 8afe.
From The Home Herald. ,. 10
"I should think you'd be « fr * r
let your boys run your autem" bl
•Oh, no; I have It insured^
Music Hath Power-
From Judge. i edu-
"Was your daughter's muftcal
cation a profitable venture. „•
-You bet! I bought
either side of u* at half their