Newspaper Page Text
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THE ATLANTA GEORGIAN AND NEWS: THURSDAY, DECEMBER 28, 1011.
THE ATLANTA GEORGIAN
(AND NEWS)
F. L, SEELY, Publisher.
EDWIN CAMP, Managing Editor.
Published Every Afternoon
(Eecept Sunday.)
By THE GEORGIAN COMPANY
At 20 Eeet Alabame-et.. Atlanta, Ga.
SUBSCRIPTION RATES:
One Year
SI* Monthe
Three Months
One Month
By Carrier, Per Week.
..*4.W
.. 2.50
.. 1J5
been attempting to organize a re
volt. and particularly in the con
tension which accompanied his
surrender, is to be found,the best
assurance of peace that han yet
come to Mexico in the disturbed
conditions incident to the new re
gime's finding itself.
Madero, voicing a general pro
test against governmental abuses
of long standing, headed an up
rising and overthrew Diaz. No
ay earner, per weak ^sooner bad be taken over the
Telephones Connecting All Departments, re)ns ot government than a lium-
Long oiatanca Terminals. (her of other ambitious leaders
I thought they were called upon in
jlike manner to overthrow Ma-
Entered as second-clans matter at thr : dero.
8 5 5fe* , m“ ,n ' a - Ca - um,cr ,he But all of them, with the ex-
J. n, Kapre- " f ««*«■' R "' V *' S '
Wntatlve Address, care The (Taorstan. till* attempt. He persisted to the
Atlanta, Ga. lend, which was miserable failure.
.. you have any trouble netting The; •■[ ealled upon the army," said
ciS7^n n deSirtment"an , d'have"* protnpUy I he, in giving himself up to Mfl-
remedied. Both phones sooo. jdero's officers, "and I called upon
Subscribers desirin* The Georgian ; the people, but no one responded.
8fac/£»”h2"f' u .xpiStKn. n S!l5raLi«!This attitu.lt- I regarded as a pro-
it will be continued at the resular sub- j ( , sf ( ,„J J r<>so lved VOl to
aerlptlon rates until notice to stop la re- . ,
ceived. continue tins war against the gov
eminent.”
Before Madero the Mexican
people demanded relief from in
tolerable conditions. Since Mil-
dei'o anti bis success they desire,
KEEPING OUT THE GLOOMS
It Is desirable that all communications
Intended for publication In The Georgian
and News he limited lo «00 words
In length. It Is Imperative that they he
r *"t ne returned j as is plain from the words and e.\-
imicaa stamps are sent for the purpose, j peripuee of General Reyes, peace
The Georgian and News prints no
san or
Neither ,
THE DOOR AND THE GATE.
Oh. I wit born too soon, my daar. or were
you born too late,
That I am going out tho door while you
come In the gate?
Far you the garden btoome galore, the
cattle le en fete:
You are the coming guest, my dear—for
me the horses wait.
t know the mansion well, my dear, Its
rooms to rich and wide; ,
If you had only coma before I might have
been your guide,
And hand In hand with you axplora the
treasures that they hide;
But you have coma to stay, my daar, and
I prepare to rids.
Than walk with ma an hour, my daar, and
pluck the reddest rose
Amid the white and crlmaon store with
which your garden glows—
A tingle roee— I ask no more of what your
love bestows:
It le enough to give, my dedr—a flower to
him who goes.
The House of Ufa It youre. my dear, for
many and many a day,
But I mutt rids the lonely shore, the Road
to Far Away:
So bring tho atlrrup-eup and pour a brim
ming draft. I pray,
And when you take the road, my dear,
I'll meet you on the way.
—llenry V4n Dyke.
-1 and (lie opportunity to rebuild
itheir country commercially mid
{industrially i hs well ns politically.
The best that tho able and sea
soned military lender was able to
do was to gather about _ him a
few irresponsibles. The' people
as a nation stood aloof—in fact,
frowned upon the sedition, un
called for as it was.
Their attitude is indeed a rain
bow of promise that means much
for the long-riven republic.
The Development, Work of
Georgia Railroads.
The records of the year now
closing show that the railroads
of Georgia have been especially
active in advertising and devel
oping the resources of the terri
tory traversed by their lines.
The resume of this work pub
lished in The Georgian is con
clusive of the fact that rf the
roads of the South have been
negligent’ in this respect in the
past they arc not. so now, but nrc
making good at a rate that is as
rapid as it is gratifying.
Railroads not only join other
wise isolated districts with the
rest of the world and its prog
ress. but they afford the oppor
tunity and the means for the reat
of the world, or a part at least,
to come to those districts and in
turn make of them places of
progress and throbbing industry.
Railroads are lindiug that they
fall far short of the high meas
ure of their function if they
merely devote themselves to the
business of passenger and freight
transportation. They can and
should be leaders in the advance
of agriculture and industry.
They receive their reward in
more populous am] more prosper
ous lines.
During the year the Georgia
roads have not been stingy with
development money. Freight tie-
pots are being built and double
tracks constructed, while steel
rails and additional ears have
been purchased in abundance.
Equipment of all kinds has been
increased, and improvements, like
automatic block signals, suburban
motor service for cities, and tele
phone dispatching systems, are
now in contemplation.
In the more specific work of
development, agricultural trains
have been operated, co-operation
lias been given in advertising
Georgia at land shows and fairs,
anil attractive advertising bulle
tins have been printed and dis
tributed. The Ikjvs corn clubs
have been encouraged and all
forma of agricultural education
given unqualified support.
Truly a good year's work.
May that of next year experience
even greater triumphs.
China Ready for a Republic?
It is natural for Americans to
look with a great deal of sym
pathy on the struggle of a peo
ple anywhere to gain greater
freedom, to take the government
of themselves into their own
hands.
It is with a feeling like this,
therefore, tlint they regard the
efforts of Young China to real
ize itself and found a republic.
Still it must be remembered that
in the growth of n people toward
enlightenment and civilization
there are certain stages in which
they are not prepared for self-
government.
Is this the ease now with
China? Are its masses far enough
ndvauced to be able to dischargo
the duties of citizenship in n re
public! If they are, well and
good. If they are not, then a
republic might prove a danger
ous experiment.
And opinion, capable and au
thoritative, is not Incking that
the Chinese at present are not
ready for popular rule.
“A republican form of govern
ment in China would be an abso
lute fnilure,” declares Professor
\V. G. Bateman, of Palo Alto,
Cal., on bis return to the United
States from Tien-Tsjn, where he
has been’ a professor in the Chi
nese Imperial university, but hns
bad to quit bis job because of
the riven conditions of the coun
try.
“The people of China,” he in
sists. “are more ignorant than wo
in America realize. Their condi
tion is awful, and they are in no
position to govern themselves.
The nation can be saved only by
mi enlightened despotism."
The peril of a republic founded
on an ignorant, backward citi
zenship is that some strong nmn
usually gathers the power into
his bauds and beeomes, by force
of bis personality, absolute ruler,
ami the cause of true freedom
thereby receives a setback for
generations. History confirms this
with scores of instances. The
Lntin-American republics furnish
ever-recurring proof of it.
If China forms a republic mid
still escapes this peril, it will be
fortunate indeed.
l# the time for tax payment.”
ax may come und <*hri#tma*
but taxes %
coroner ba*« hi# hand#
Insane celebration of
o prevalent muit have
‘Failing to crack safe, they trundle
uwuy.” Living up to it# name in
i t \ respect seems to be a pretty
id job for any #nfe.
A 1 !«»#ton nmn ha# worked out a sys
tem of how to know a perfect baby.
It need# no eyatem to tell, however,
when one ha# a perfectly good pair of
lungs.
Homebody should get up a prise for
the city which is able to survive Christ-
n.as without a murder or other fatality.
Money so contributed would be well
used.
The Call That Failed.
* - , „ ,i Taft wants the currency system re
lit till? Mtirretlfier of (ielHn-al t Vised. Hut we wonder If he desire# to
_>HBenuirdu Reyes t«* the Mexican | «,«“ ,lntl1 ■*"""• 'esvil nr ..thf r-imn*
Ugovernim.'iit. against whii-li In- bus' ’ " l "”" m
How to Keep Eggs
From The Literary Digest.
Tim very fact that no one would know
ingly buy for hia own use eggs that had
been Htored for long period# I#* sufficient
proof of the unsatisfactory character of
all methods of preservation hitherto din
covered. A writer in Energy (English edi
tion, LeJpslc, October), however, tells of
recently devised processes that give some
promise. We are reminded that eggs
spoil for two reasons—fermentation and
Infection by* bacteria from without. It
will not do aimply to exclude germs if the
elements of decay arc already within the
shell. Processes in which the contents
of the egg arc removed from the shell
and so . preserved are gaining in favor,
we are told, despite the fact that In
ferior methods of this sort, used in tho
past, have proved objectionable und un
satisfactory. Old and new* methods are
thus outlined:
"Home procc
with acids and then provide them w
coat of wax, paraffin, etc., In order to
close up the pores. They do not cope
with germs that have been Inclosed in the
egg. These germs push Inward and cause
decay. The shells often become very soft
from the application of silicates or cal
elum salts, other methods Impurt an un
factory results. Two firms have Just In
troduced some egg-preserving processes,
which, according to report, promise much
in this direction. Eggs are said to re
main fresh a long time and may be truns
ported long distances. They may be dis
patched In common crates, thru which the
air passes, or In tight-closed boxes. Thus
market I#'now provided STS. fresh „
yolk chemically preserved. Preparations
of this nature have become leading arti
cles of trade. Kitchen suit, boric acid,
benzoic add, formalin and its derivntes,
and salts are generally used for preserv
ing purposes, but are not altogether un
objectionable from the standpoint of food
chemistry. Kthylic alcohol Is a practical
preserving agent for egg yolk. for. as
commonly known, it I# used for making
eggnog. A drill of the food brunch In
making a stable quality of preserved egg
yolk containing all the essential ingre
dients. The fresh yolk Is mixed with co
res, and the mixture desiccated at a
low temperature. Egg yolk and albumen
powder are made by various houses.
Home branches of industry make use of
egg yolk substitutes, which are placed on
the market by several firms, und consist
chiefly of albumin, casein and coloring
matter. These surrogates may be distin
guished without any trouble from the nat
ural product, by making the following
test: Pour the substance under investi
gation Into a reaction glass, shut . ft
tight, and warm to a moderate tempera
ture. If it is real egg yolk, the charac
teristic odor of an egg will be apparent:
the odor of the substitute resembles that
ot skimmed milk, which 1# due to casein.”
Lineal Descendant.
From Tit-Bits.
An Englishman 'applied to the Her
alds* college for a coat of arms. In
such case It is pleasant to be able to
borrow one from a celebrated ancestor.
Tlu* man In question could not remem
ber anything about his greut-grand
parents, and, therefore, could not men
tion any 'achievement by them which
could be used as the basis of a coat of
arms. But the official to whom he ap
plied wan not easily discouraged.
"Have you not done something your
self'.*" he asked.
“Nothing. 1 fear,” said the man, add
ing a# a pathetic antithesis that once,
having been locked in Ltidgate prison
for debt, he had found means to es
cape from an upper w indow.
“And how did you get down?”
“I got a cord, fixed it around the neck
of King Lud’s statue, and let myself
down.”
“Just the thing. Thera you have It—
honor enough. Lineally descended from
King bud. Hi# coat of arm# is good
enough for you.”
Knew -All About It.
From The Boston Transcript.
Jack—When I asked Ethel if she
would b** mine she fell on my breast
and sobbed Ilk* a child, but finally she
put her arm* around my neck and—
Maud—Oh. yes, 1 know all about thsl.
1 rehearsed It with her.
“Cfolng fo turn over a new leaf on the first of the year, eh?” said
the Business Doctor. ' “In case you do, my boy, be sure there Is not a
whisky ad on the n?xt page. This matter of New Year’s resolutions Is a
fruitful field for the professional hu
morist, because there Is not one man
in ten who sticks to his New Year’s
resolutions until St. Valentine's day.
"I know that you believe you will. I
know that your Intention# are good. I
also know that the ancient highbrow
who made the statement that the road
to a certain warm »POt was *-aved
with good Intentions made a bullseye.
The resolutions you make are as wool-
ish as the gyrations of a bug that
has flown Into a candle flame, while
the ones that are kept arn the ones
which make toward Character.
“Discount your New Year# resolu
tion exactly one half. When a man
figures on any: business proposition, If
he is wise, he realises that the en
thusiasm of the moment Is a big fac
tor in hia calculations. He knows tlmt
the expense of carrying out the deal
will be greater than the figures he
sets down and that the Income from It
will be less; so trimming from both
ends for the discount of enthusiasm,
ho cuts off 50 per cent, and if the proposition does not still show a profit,
he lays the plan aside.
“Follow this safe and sane method in the plans you have for next
year. You tell me'that you are going to save exactly 25 per cent of
your income next year, I tell you it won't work out. You will stick to
this plun for about two paydays, and then, discovering that you ane com
pelled to sacrifice all your umuMments. you decide not to put the prom
ised sum in the savings bank: that you will pass it up for just one pay
day. and you will find before the robins nest again you will have failed
dismally.
“Try lo per cent—no, don’t try 10 percent—save 10 per cent, and
you will have a chance of making good on it. Set aside exactly 10 per
rent of your pay each time you get the envelope and put It In tho savings
Institution you have selected, and for the first year 1 would advise you to
put It in some institution where you have to give thirty days’ notice
before you ‘‘.in withdraw It, or, better still. In some #ort of an instity-
flon where you will lose all you have already put In If you fall in your
monthly or weekly payments. This will make you hang on to save los#.
“Next year, after you have learned a little more about 'the plans of
saving, you ran Increase the weekly appropriation with more safety, for
men make progress In savings habit# the fame ns they do In bad habits.
The man who take one cocktail before breakfast this year will require two
of them a# an appetizer next year, and the man wjto saves 10 per cent of
his income tills year will be able to save twice 10 ~er cent next year.
“The point I am anxious to Impress on you, however. Is not to de
cide on too much. The enthusiasm of the moment will niAke you decide
to do more than you can carry out In actual practice, and when you
onee break the routine, the whole scheme goes to smash, and feeling that
your case Is lost, you will fritter away even the little you have saved.
“You will notice 1 have said nothing of your moral resolutions. If
you will take up the financial end, the morals will take tare of themselves
automatically. No saving man Is dissipated; he can not he. Get right
with the saving# (tank, and the morals will adjust themselves, as immoral
ity l# expensive and the easiest expense to abandon. The most impor
tant thing, however, is to discount those New Year’s resolution# Just 50
per cent, and the chance# of your keeping them will he Increased just 50
per cent.” ;
UNCLE WALT philosopher |
This country holds the murder record, may hold it to the
end of time: the nation’s history is checkered with everything
ill deadly crime. Our murderers are all acquitted if they have
money by the pock: and if a hempen noose is
THE MURDER fitted about some slayer’s swanlike neck u|>oii
the gallows where the sawyers have left n hole
RECORD for him to drop, it means lie couldn’t hire the
lawyers who beat know how to stall and yawp.
A man may spend long year* in prison for forging a five-dollar
cheek; the lowly bigamist gets hia’n, the firebug gets it in the
neck. The cops pursue the idle vagrant and soak him on his
funny bone; and in the jailyard, large and fragrant, you sqc
the plain tlmuk breaking stone. But lie who shoots his fellow
creature, and sends him to the great beyond, beeomes the
daily’a scare head feature, is lionized, while out on bond, llis
trial is like an entertainment: lie’s freed, when lawyers cease
to rage: he never know what fear or strain meant, and now he
elevates the stage. WALT MASON.
Copyright. 1911, by George Matthew Adams.
Army-Navy Orders
And Movements of Vessels
The Business Doctor
1 »«
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to
Boe Fulkerson
TPADB MARK EEGMTMRM*
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,Wa»hington, Dec. 28.—The following
order, have been Issued:
Army Order,.
Captain R. I.. Carswell, medical
corpa, detailed for iluy In bureau of
navigation, Philippine Island,, relieving
Captain P. W. Huntington, medical
corps, who will sail for San Francisco.
Second Lieutenant H. M. Pool, ap
pointed from civil life, I, assigned to
Eleventh Infantry.
Navy Orders.
Lieutenant (Junior grade) H. B. Kel
ly to the North Carolina.
The Pensacola has been placed out of
commission at Maryland and stricken
from the navy register.
Movements of Naval Vessels.
Arrived—Decatur, at Nanking: Bar
ry, dt Shanghai: Patuxet and Poto
mac, at Ouantanamo; Arethusa. at
Charlestown.
Sailed—Solan*, from Hampton Roads
for Boston; Nanshan. from Shanghai
for Cavite; Birmingham, from Boston
for Hampton Roads; Patterson. Am-
men, Burrows, Monaghan and Trippe,
from Charleston for Newport.
Only Thing that Can Prevent
Him Securing Nomination Is
for Machine to Rule.
The Wickedness of
Weak Nations
Front The New York World.
A bitter lesson must be taught Per*
sia. This has been decided upon In St.
Peterflburg.
True, Persia has consented to dis
charge Mr. Shuster, who made the pre.
posterous mistake of supposing that
she would be- permitted by Russia and
Great Britain to reform her financ
but she did not do it sooh enough. Her
sinful reluctance put Russia to the
trouble of sending troops to massacre
women and children In Tabriz and
elsewhere, and of course Persia must
pay, not only in money, but In blood
and tears, to teach her not to be again
so presumptuous.
That Is the way weak nations always
act toward strong one#. They seem to
have no moral sense. They are always
putting themselves in the wrong.
There was the Boer republic. All It#
boasted Blble-reading did not teach it
to meet the Jameson raid by non-re-
slstance and let alien gold-seekers run
the country; so Great Britain had to
lay waste the land. It cost $20 an
acre and the British didn’t own the
acres In thd land: but the lesson In
politeness simply had to bo taught.
The Washington correspondent of
The Boston Transcript sends the fol
lowing:
Presidential politics Is on all tongue:
at the capitol. The senators and re,,,
resentatives are talking almost nothing
else. Regardless oi their personar pr,, r .
erences. Northern and Southern Deir.n.
crats alike admit that Woodrow Wilson
Is the candidate moat talked about i>,
the rank and file of the party. ■;[ ,j 0
not believe there ever was a time whed
tho drift of public sentiment toward .-J
certain candidate was so unmistak
able." said one Democratic member of
the house from the middle West. “Wil
son will be nominated If the machine
Democrats do not name the delegate.
The friends of Governor Wilson ail
now engaged In perfecting an organL
zatlon that will attenfpt to get results
In tho way of delegates. The Wilson
people have come to realise that public
sentiment Is n good thing as far a; h
goes, but that It takes something m. re
than public sentiment to control the
election of delegates to a national con
vention. An effort will be made to form
a Wilson organization In even- state—
an organization that will undertake to
bring about the election of delegate*
friendly the nomination of the x, A
Jersey governor.
Daily Health Chat
IT AN ATLANTA PHYSICIAN.
BLOOD STAINS.
Not Infrequently verdicts involving the
life of supposed murderer# depend upon
the interpretation of blood stains i.y
port#. A person suspected of homicide
is fotind to have blood upon hi# elnthfl|
this blood may not be human
blood, and it devolves upon the court t
prove thru expert testimony whether o
not the blod is human.
Occasionally stains made by dyes hav*
been mistaken at first for blood stain#
„ - - . .. . .. v - but the expert I# at once able to dlstin-
ZSPnSZJE ‘ h ,f. A„ ! gulsh bloodslalna from stains hot made by
What possesses the weak nations
should act #o shamefully to
mg ones? Have thelt*. atates-
the wolf drank?
j; Growth and Progress
C of the New South
• The Industrial Index says in its «
«• issue for this week:
“Now beginning to purple the «
heights of the outposts of creation. •
the dawning year of 1912 comes with •
magnificent promise for *ho Huuth- •
east.
“Nothing short of a public calani- •
Ity can keep It from unfolding and •
fulfilling the greatest prospects that .
this part of the country has ever •
known. »
“It Is easy to make such a decla- ■
ration, even tho unsubstantiated by
fact. In this instance, It I# founded
upon fact.
"There was oil beneath the sur
face of the ground In Pennsylvania •
and adjacent stales many years ho- .
fore the discovery of It gave riches <
to the fortunate developers. Gold <
was hoarded by Mother Earth on the «
Pacific slop© centuries perhaps he- .
fore a miner found It, and the pre
cious metal attracted people from •
• • the four quarters of the globe und •
enabled them to lay the foundation •
of an empire. The sun shone Just •
as brightly and the sen breeze# ■
cooled the summer atmosphere just •
• • as delightfully in California ages «
before even the padres built their •
chain of century-old missions along •
the coast, but it was not until the <
salubrity of the cllmute became •
known to the country that wide <
areas were planted in oranges and •
other citrus fruits, great cities .
sprang up and there began u yearly •
migration that has bad no superior •
in this country. .
“The Houtheast has no resources •
now that it.ha# not had for many
years. But they have been di“
ered. And with the discover)
C<»me a development that expands •
with the weeks. The Industrial In
dex records week after week the es
tablishing of more and more indus
trial plants and the development of
mors and more resources. Steadily
the fists grow longer, and this year
the increase ha# been greater than
ever before in any year In the his
tory of the Southeast.
"Conditions here for manufactur
ing are most favorable, and money
• •from other parts of thla country
and front abroad I# being invested •
In Industrial enterprises In ever- *
growing volume. The cities and t
towns are being, built up and their .
business enterprises are increasing .
in number and growing in scope und •
importance. ,
“Never l^fore were rarm lands In «
Alabama and Georgia In such de- .
inn ml as now—because they have *
been discovered. Hut a short time .
ago, the trend of homeneekers was .
Westward. Tills f# changing. The .
tide bus started Southward—just *
started. It I# true—and It is coming .
this way with doubling force and .
impetus.
“This section with 4ts fine water 4»
powers, navigable rivers, great for-
ests of hardwoods and of pine, lm- *8*
mense treasures In ore de|*>slts. 4-
highly productive lands, extensive
and ever-expanding railway far 111-
ties, unsurpassed climate and other *
resources that await op|>ortunity to A
pay dividend* Is the last irr the coun- •>
try to be developed.
“Its development is coming at u
time when there are more i»eople In
the country who want homes than
ever before, more capital that must
have employment and more pro
gressive ami efficient ideas of busi
ness and of development.
“Inder these conditions, the de-
the rich resources of
.K tht ‘ a * t w,u J* lhe moBl rapid
lh *». ** he ceunl f y has ever known.
It is a precise business fact that
In the past five years the Houtheast
has increased in business and de
velopment faster than has any other
port of the country. The next five
>ears will see an even greater
rimnge, and the years will be few
before this section will begin to *,
really come into Its own—when It
will enjoy to a very much greater 4* 1
! l £. c * u , n ." h, . ne of prosperity. J
- a# it nog re Vein in rays of genial A
£ warmth over which the ice king ho# X
•f no fiower.” • t
... , , , . , . , , . * kuibii uiDuunininn iruui mums mu mane
1 ' ol " " hl 1 ,l ,,"i™ d „n„ Mood.* Ho .!«.» thi, by dissolving a go
Cromwell# canal treaty, and to avenge #4 . .. 0 f „i„
the insult Mr. Roosevelt took the canal | llo J of } t,e Kta ! n J n a 80,ut,0 J 1 °f Jbcerlne
i —^ and then examining tho sped-
r the microscope. The presence
corpuscles prove that the stain
Is blood, while the absence of these bloo«
That wag sloppy cells, of course, eliminates the possibllltj
of blood having caused the stain.
There is so little difference between
corpuscles In human blod and In the Wood
of warm-blooded animals that it is not
always practicable to swear to human
blood simply by the shape and the 1
of the corpuscles.
Recently, however, a test ha# been
covered which Is unique, reliable and
to perform. It is based on this biological
fact: if a little blood from an animal uf a
given species, a dog for Instance, be in
jected Into a rabbit and later some Wood
drawn from the rabbit, this blood will mix
clearly with that of any animal except
a member of the canine species. With
canine blood it produces a cloudiness. Tak
ing advantage of this “serum reaction
principle we may determine what sort <
blood a stain is. If the stain be dl*
solved and mixed with the blood of a rab
bit. and the serum drawn from the rah
bit produces no cloudiness upon the mix
ture with a solution of human blood, then
the stain is not made of human blood,
whereas If the cloudiness appears the
stain I# human.
Winnowed Witticisms
The "Real Hsnry Cl»y."
From The Popular Magazine.
One winter morning Henry Clay, find
ing himself In need of money, went |<*
the UlggH bank and usked for the loan or
*250 tin hi# iiersonat note, lie was t*»M
that while hi# credit was perfectly good?
It was the Indexible rule of the bank t”
require gn indorser. The greut states
man hunted up Daniel Webster and usked
him to indorse the note. _ , .
“With pleasure," said Rsbster. But J
need some money myself. Why not maze
your note for five hundred, and you ano
l will split It?” • , , ,
Till* they i did. And today the note i»
in the lUggs bank—unpaid.
Fldo’s Limitations.
From The Woman’s Home Comi«ni'*n.
Fitln's .Mistress (sobbing)—I’'
rertiecnient in the newspaper.
’’Ido’# Mistress—Oh, what would be the
use? The t*>or darling doesn’t know
to read.
Tha Worst Over.
From Harpqr’# Bazar.
Mary—Are you going to ask Ma to
bride? She ha# been home from Lurui*
rix week#. '
Alice—wily. ye«; I'll »nk her Bho mujt
have Htupped teliing.her foreign experi
ences by now.
7
A.K.Hawkes Go.
OPTICIANS
A tlioroqph, complric
i'NuniiiiHtioii of your
ey.'s by competent op-
tiemrijf and tlie correct
lenses fitted in the lat
est spectacle and eye
glass mountiiik's. 111
reasonable prices.
.Don’t let those stub
born headaches worry
you any longer. The
proper glasses will re
lieve you.
Come in and talk to
our optieians about
your eyes.
14 WHITEHALL ST.
\