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THE ATLANTA GEORGIAN AND NEWS: FRIDAY, DECEMBER 29, 1911.
THE ATLANTA GEORGIAN
(AND NEWS)
F. L. SEELY. Publlshtr,
EDWIN CAMP. Managing Editor.
Published Every Afternoon
(Except Sunday.)
By THE GEORGIAN COMPANY
At 20 Eaat Alabama-at.. Atlanta. Oa.
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I March S. IS?*.
tween the progressives and the I
standpatters in the Republican
party promises to be particularly
interesting from now until the
meeting of the national conven
tion. Senator .LaFollette, of Wis
consin, is the acknowledged
leader of the former, while Presi
J. It, Palmer. Foreign Traveling U«Pt*-
sentatiTe. Address, care The Georgian,
Atlanta. On.
If you have any trouble getting TJin
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Neither r'oealt print whisky or liquor ade.
THE PINE TREE.
It etande where Nature's puleea freeie
Beneath the polar eye,
And hangs Its drooping bannars out
'Naath India's burning tky.
From north to south, from east to west.
Where'er the eun may ehlne.
It lifts end waves Its lordly crest—
The all enduring Pine.
In regions wildest end unknown,
Betide the restlees seas.
It breathes Its deep end mellow tono
Thru nature's mlnetreley;
'Tie heard upon the mountain’s breaet
And by the river's line.
And ’mid the busy haunts of men,—
The melancholy Pino.
Ill balmy broath la on tho air.
Amid tha forest gloom,
The early winds of morning beer
Its delicate perfume.
Its dewy odor Alls the tenia
At evening’s slow decline,
And night's soft pinions linger still
Around the fragrant Pine,
I love It—It hath been to mo
An old familiar friend,
And broadly o'er my native lend
Its waving branches bend.
And widely thru Ita hallowed soil
Its rugged roote entwine,
And wreathe with every thought of home
The well-remembered Pine,
love It, for Ito music broethes
O'er many a hallowed spot
Where lie the loved end lowly dead
Who may not be forgot;
And when I seek their holy rest
Ohl may this heart recline,
My Southern home, upon thy broeat,
Beneath the mourning Pino.
--Francis Orray Tlcknor.
The Merchants’
“At Home?’ Week.
Tho February may be the
shortest month of the year, it
promises to be one of the liveliest
for Atlanta.
With the automobile show and
the merchants convention both
taking place during the week of
February 12, the city will be
crowded with thousands of vis
itors and the week with festivi
ties.
The merchants’ trade week is
a most felicitous means of pro
moting Atlanta’s wholesale trade
and extending the distribution of
the products of'its factories.
The thousands of retail mer
chants of Georgia, Alabama,. Flor
ida, the Carolines and other near
by states will be invited to At
lanta for a week of better trade
and social acquaintanceship. In
other cities where such occasions
are the custom there have come
| many profitable returns both for
I the cities who aro the hosts and
In ordering » change of address. rteue the merchants who are the guests.
“ ■' The trade of the cities has flour
ished and the visiting merchants
have come to know, as never be
fore, the cheapness ns well as all
the other substantial advantages
of elose-to-home markets.
A city-can have no more solid
pillar to the foundation of its
prosperity than the jobbing bus
iness serving an extensive aud
wide-awake territory. Both the
business and the territory At-,
lanta possesses. That they be
brought into closer relations is
the present need, and this trade
week will go a long way toward
doing it. The promoters 'of tho
plan are due the commendation
and thanks of the city.
The North Georgia
Apple Country.
The visit to Atlanta of Dr.
George T. Powell, president of
the Agricultural Experts associa
tion, of New York, and a load
ing horticulturist, hfia served to
reaffirm the fact that north Geor
gia is one of the finest apple-
growing regions to be found any
where. '
Among the state’s neglected
agricultural opportunities that of
apple-growing is conspicuous.
The soil and climate are here.
All that is needed is the develop
ment of the industry, and this is
already on the 'way to realisa
tion.
In his speech 1, at the luncheon
tendered him,'Dr. Powell told of
north Georgia's rich possessions
ns ail apple country, pointing
out the advantages of its soil, ole-
vntion and its drainage—all im
portant factors in the production
of fruit of high color and high
flavor..
“The consumers of your city,”
he declared, "are at ithe present
time liRiiig apples at the cost of a
aja ^
+ Growth and Progress I
I * of the New South $
+
. <S har f
Among the more Important of the • •
new Industries organlxed during the • •
week ending December 27, as re- v
ported by The Tradesman, are the
following;
Alabama—Andalusia, $16,000 naval
• • stores company.
Arkansas—Arkansas City. $50,000
“A Winter Diversion.”
The tight for dominance
bc-
. . T Tin . T» T. dollar a dozen, grown upon land
dent. Taft muft look to the lat- 11(>nr j v ;(ooo miles away, on the
irrigated soil -of the Northwest,
ter for ronomigation. ,
The contest between the two
has now been staged in earnest
by Senator LaFollette's invasion
of Ohio, the president’s homo
state, and the prospect that it is
to be a vigorous yone is indicated
by the positife sUnd taken by
the senator in opposition to many
of the president's cherished
tenets and policies.
The initiative, referendum and
recall, especially of judges, have
not found an enthusiastic sup
porter in President Taft. Sena
tor LaFollette, in his Ohio
speeches, .declares them to be
among the cardinal principles of
the progressives. The Taft plan
of Federal incorporation and con
trol of trusts was opposed by the
senator as being ineffective. The
present Republican tariff was de
nounced, as was also the national
reserve association of the Aldrich
monetary system.
It is thus shown that harmony
in the affairs of the Republican
party for the next six months is
to be a missing quantity.
Warren G. Iliirding, of Ohio,'
one of the president’s support
ers and advisers, on a visit to
the white house, made light of
the LaFollette invasion, express,
ing the opinion that it was mere
ly “n winter diversion,” and
that the state was safe for Taft.
It is evident, however, that
while the words might have’.been
nieasing to the president’s ear,
le is not according them implicit
confidence. The nows dispatches
state that, notwithstanding cold
and storm, large crowds are gath
ering to hear the apostle of iti
surgehev and are greeting bis ut
terances with hearty applause. If
it is merely a diversion, the pres
ident wants to participate in it,
tor he has announced that he
will making a speaking tour of
Ohio the latter part of next
month. He undoubtedly consid
ers that a counter diversion
would prove, valuable
ai nauaas-'ni aaiisao vuy.
bank; England. 916.000 bank: Hunt*
Infton, 924,000 mine: Paragould,
«?».<— - - -
Florl
$50,000 real-
deorgis—Atlanta, $75,000 hardware
■mpany. 450,000 hardware company.
• • $25,000 oil company; Coolldge. $25.-
• • 000 bank: Macon, $50,000 bank.
.. Kentucky—Aahiond, $10,000 all and
- > gas company; Bowling Green, $25,-
.. ooo oom planter company; Catletts-
- • burg, $5,000 electric company; Bhel-
• • byvllle, $20,000 warohouae company.
• • Lonlolana—Now Orleans, $50,000
■ ■ chewing gum (actory. $12,000 Invest-
• - inent company.
• ■ Mississippi—Greenwood. $1,000,000
plantation company.
North Carolina—Aahevllle, $10,000
• ■ realty company; Charlotte, $25,000
■ • heating ana ventilating plant, $25,-
• ■ 000 automobile company; Enfield,
*$25,000 drug company; Jackson, $50,-
000 buggy company; Nashville, $10.-
H vehicle company; Wilmington,
,000 flsh company; Wilson, $125,- • >
cotton mill; Wln»ton-Hslem, > >
$100,000 hospital company.
Oklahoma—Bartlesville, $10,000 oil
company; Catsra, $$,000 gas plant;
Hugo, $21,000 manufacturing plant;
Mautll, $10,000 mine; Oklahoma, $$.-
000 contracting company; Pone*
J 'lty, $200,000 gas company; Kapulpa,
5,000 oil company; Tulsa. $2,000 oil
company; Weleetks, $20,000 mine.
South Carolina—Columbia, $20,000
laundry; Johnston. $25,000 printing
and publishing company: McBee,
6,000 telephone company; Rock Hill,
$17,000 hospital company; Waller-
boro, $4,000 saw mill.
Tennessee — Chattanooga, $1,000,-
000 cotton oil company; Knoxville,
$25,000 creosote plant; Loudon, $25.-
ix- - - White'* Crook,
min; uanas. 45,000,000 bank: , Gal
veston, $20,000 amusement company;
Houston, $10,000 hottl company, $10.-
000 development company, $10,000
development company: Jit. Vernon.
$20,000 waterworks; Keinllg, $40,000
naval stores company; San Antonio,
$1$,000 realty company. $25,000 Irri
gation company; White Flat, $0,000
mill and gin company.
Virginia—Alexandria, $10,000 real
ty company, $150,000 manufacturing
plant, I 1 —
Clarkavl
',vuv manufacturing
lumblng comrany;
dalghl .
Norfolk, $20,000 land company;
Portsmouth, $32,000 Investment com
pany; Roanoke, $50,000 lime and
atone company; Woodstock,’ $60,000
realty company.
West Virginia—Buckhannon, $75.-
000 copper company, $16,000 oil and
gas company; Hlucfletd. $15,000 hotel
company, $16,000 shipping case com
pany; Bond, $200,000 mine; Clarks
burg, $5,000 xlnc company; Olenvllle,
$10,000 orchard company; Jan* Lew,
$*5 000°*l and gas company;_McNell, • •
nd gas
hard o ■
.000 foundry; Wheeling,
coal and lumber company. • •
The Idea,
Sibyl—“The way that man looked at
mo was most insulting.”
Gwendolln—"Did he stare?"
Sibyl—"No, that's tho trouble. AH
ho gave me was a casual glance—after
I paid 70 cents for my new 'cobweb'
stockings.”
WHO SAYS THEY NEVER COME BACK?
Some Recent Interpretations of Criminal Laws by
. State Courts
»YS SAM ME
Princetonian Is Stronger Right
Now Than Any Other Man
in Democratic Party.
Samuel O. Blythe, political editor
The Saturday Evening Boat, has just
completed his tour of the entire Unit, d
States, looking Into tho political sltu a .
tlon as It afreets the campalng for the
presidency In 1912. Summing up con
ditions as he discovered them in the
Host, West, North and South, Mil
Blythe says:
“So fdr as the voters of the counm
aro directly concerned, meaning th
Democrats and the Independent Rcpuh
Keans, Wilson Has the greater strength
at this time. If It were a mass conven
tion Wilson would be nominated. Pub
lic sentiment may be developed to such
an extent that Wilson’s nomination can
not be prevented. Wilson's.nomination
will be preVonted If the old-line Dem-
oernts and the interests can prevent It
but, with Wilson and Harmon dead
locked. the game may, shift so us to
make almost any of the others who bum
have votes a lively possibility. The
Democratlc nomination Is a long nay
from being settled at present, but It i«
definite that Wilson has the greatest
strength Just now, with all the other«
trailing. There will be a chance (or
much line polities at that convention. It
would be well for any person Interested
in the outcome to he polite to all the
candidates who may appear. Am- on-
of them may be selected.
"My survey of the entire country has
convinced me-of this; Mr. Taft win be
renominated If he remains In his pres
ent frame of mind and demands rennm-
Inatlon. Mr. Taft will- be defeated If
the Democrats use any discretion in
naming the candidate to oppose him
Of course a political miracle may hap-
pen—I admit that; but political mlm-
clps are of slow creation and It Is less
than a year until the next election. Be
sides, the only miracle worker mhn
could work one that would be effective
is Mr. Taft—and he Isn't much at that
sort of thing."
Army-Navy Orders
And Movements of Vessels
Washington, Dec. 29c—The following
orders have been Issued:
Army Orders,
Captain Q. H. Preston, transferred
from the Thirteenth to the Eighth oav
airy.
Captain W. H. Clopton, Jr., tram
ferred from tha Twelfth to the Eighth
cavalry.
Movements of Naval Vettsls.
Arrived—Balnbrldge, at Shanghai
Ammen, at Charleston; Nanshan, tt
Amoy.
Sailed—Mara, Hector and Vulcan,
from Seawall Point for Guantanamo;
Buffalo, from Honolulu for Shanghai
New Orleans, from Shanghai for Br«
inerfon; Drayton, McCall. Paulding.
Hoe, Terry, Perkins, Mayrant, Sterrett
Wnlko and Warrington, from Charlei
ton for Norfolk.
Daily Health Chat
■T AN ATLANTA PHYSICIAN.
THE MENACE OF SYMPATHY.
which, while beautiful in color
and nt tractive in appearance. do
not compare in point of flavor
with those that may be grown
the hilly section l of north
Georgia.
“The advantages of this sec
tion of the state ure in its com
paratively cheaper land, freedom
from the necessity nnd cost of
drainage, richness of its soil, aud
ease of cultivation. Thousands of
acres of this land should .be sup
plying the consumers of Georgia
with an' abundance of this most
healthful and desirable fruit at a
reasonable rate.” '
At the recent eorn show there
were exhibits of Georgia apples
that were a revelation to all who
them, bringing forth the
query, '“Why should we longer
enrich Western growers with
our purchases when such apples
as these can lie grown in our
own statet” It is a safe pre
diction that within a short time
this question will be supplied
with a satisfactory unswer.
"From Sun Worshiper* cult court
rescues heir to millions." A distinctly
visible ccltpae for the cult n6 doubt.
"Feralaoa attack British ontcial."
They let Shuster go nnd they have not
yet ceased.- to proceed with their very
hlgli.cluss brand of folly.
The tariff war ie on again In the
tower house. CongreMes may come and
congresses may go, but tt aeems that
the people go on paying trust prices
forever.
Admiral George Dewey, the hero of
Manila bav, recently celebrated his
seventy-fourth birthday. He performed
a great service for the republic. It has
been already too lightly forgotten.
A London writer declares that wom
en after >0 want kisses, not caramels.
Really tt would ba more accurate to
say that they want a continuation of
both.
After th* expiration of the present
treaty. It 1* said that Russia will bar
American Jews altogether ns a retalia
tion for the action of the United fltates
on the passport question. Russia, tt
appears. Is Just non abje to forget the
jolt that Japan handed It and is get
ting chesty again
. No presumption of tho Intent neces
sary to render a hpmioldo murder In
the flret degree Is held In Common
wealth vs. I.'hapler tl’a.), 44 L.R.A.
(N.B.) 14, to arise from tho tt»o of a
dejully weapon dlriwtly against a vital
part of the body, altho tho Jury may
consider such facts together with all
tho other facta In the ca*e, In determin
ing whether or not such Intent exlated.
A note to thla case reviews all the au
thorities on the question of presump
tion an to distinctive elements of mur
der Ip first degree front use of deadly
weapon.
In a trial for bigamy undor c statute
which does not make intent an element
of the crime, tt Is held In 8taley vs.
Stnte (Nebr.), 34 L.R.A. (N.S.) «1S. that
It la no defense for accused to prove he
acted In good faith on advice of coun
sel that a former marriage to hi* cous
in was void, and that a deputy county
attorney threatened him with prosecu
tion for living, with her, where such
former marriage la valid.
One who unlawfully, willfully, mali
ciously and forcibly breuka and enters
a mill building, with the Intent to steal
property of any value, Is held In Shults
va. State (Nebr,), 24 L.R.A. (N.S:) 242,
to be guilty, altho there Is no personal
property therein,
A forged note found In an attorney'*
desk when It was being, searched by
private Individuals for papers belonging
to his client Is held In People vs. Camp
bell (Mich.), 34 L.B.A. (N.S.)'68. not to
he Inadmissible against him In a prose
cution for the forgery, as violating hts
constitutional right not to be a witness
against himself, altho there Is no other
evidence of the corpus delicti, so that
Its use, In effect, is to force from him
nn extra Judicial confession thereof.
One who, upon the day he Is Indicted
for homicide, enters a plea of guilty be
cause he Is Informed that the trial
Judge has stated that It he t* to do *o
he had better do It before the train
leaves which would take him to a jail
In another count)', as mob violence Is
feared, and la Immediately found guilty,
sentenced to death and taken to such
Jail, Is held In Little vs. Commonwealth
(Ky.>, 44 LR.A. (N.S.) 267, to bo enti
tled to a new trial nnd permission to
Withdraw his plea.
An Indictment for robber)- In taking a
stud or stone ornament supported by a
screw or spiral 1* held lit People vs.
Nolan (III.), 34 L.R.A. (N.S.) 301. to be
sufficient, which describes It a* a pin.
And th# President's Pastor, Too.
From Th* Saturday Evening Post.
Rev. Ulysses O. B. Pierce, chaplain
of the United 8**t*s senate and Presi-
dent Taft’s pastor at a Washington
Unitarian ohureh, told a group of sena-
tori a few days ago of a letter he,had
received the previous morning from a
strong Methodist friend of hie. The let
ter read:
"Dear Doctor: Yesterday morning
while on the way to services In my
own church I was overtaken by th*
heavy rain we had. As I did not have
an umbrella with me. and was near
your church, I went In and for the
drat time listened to one of your ser
mons. Next Sunday I am going to
cam - »n umbrella."
Appointed Executioner.
From Norman E. Mack's National
Monthly. ...
On a busy day ,a woman walked
Into the office of the court room* at
Atlanta. Oa.. and addressing Judge
Blank, said:
"Are you the reprobate Judge'.
"J am the probate Judge.”
"That'a what 1 wss saying.” she said,
"and I have to come to you because I
am In trouble. My husband was study
ing to be a minister at a 'logical sem
inary and he died detested, and left
three little Intldels, and I have come to
be appointed their executioner."
UNCLE WALT * PHILOSOPHER 1
Pretty soon, ray friend, you 'll stand, with your hand across
your heart, making solemn vows and grand, bidding all your
sins depart. When the new yenr's ushered in, then you always
throw a fit, saying, “Chase yourself!” to
THE COMING-VOWS ain, and to virtue, “You arc it!" All
your weaknesses you shake, with a loud
“ nixeumarouae." In a morfth or two you break all your
galaxy of vow*. Why not make a single pledge that a mortal
man may keept Then you will not need to hedge when temp-
tation’a running deep. Why not »ay, “The one best bet’ is a
single lonely \’ow; ao I will not go in debt till a hundred year*
front now.” If you make that little vow. make it firmly, in
good faith, trouble, that’* a giant now, soon will be a distant
wraith. Debt is worse than ghouls or gnomes, worse than ginx
or jabberwocks: debt is wrecking countless homes, driving good
men on the rocks. Debt goes glooming down the year*. brood
ing o'er the streets and marts, filling nil the world with tears,
wrecking Uvea and breaking hearts. If you cut out debt, my
friend, you will sidestep lots of gloom: floral horseshoes, at the
end. wiU be heaped upon your tomb. WALT MASON.
Copyright. 1911. by Otorgo Matthew
^ To those wh.o love children It may seem
uterly Impossible to bestow upon Mttle
folks too much sympathy. Nevertheless,
lusting flamego may be done by encour
aging. with ready sympathy, children of
Introspective dispositions to magnify the
minor Ills of childhood.
Speaking of this danger on the part
of doting mothers'or others. Dr. Francis
X. Dercutn writes as follows: 'Tn chil
dren In whom a tendency to hypochon
dria (fancied disease) is noted, every ef
fort should be made to minimise ail
ments from which they suffer or acci
dents thru which they pass. Little at
tention should be paid to transient Ill
nesses or slight cuts and bruises; above
all, should sympathy be withheld; noth
ing should be said or don) to create the
Impression In the child's mind that he
has been seriously 111 or hurt. TJie neg
lect of this precaution often leads in a
suitable soil to a confirmed hypochondria
In later life. It Is important to see that
children of hypochondria tendencies are
not put under too severe a pressure at
school; they should lead hygienic lives—
especially as regards food, exercise ami
work. Everything should be done also to
harden such children by Judicious ex
posure. We should remember, also, that
tendencies to live witn
much in their company.
On the other hand, sensitive children
not tending to hypochondria often need
inoro sympathy than they receive, so that
It Is a nice question just how to. regulate
one’s emotional attitude towards mem
bers of the oncoming generation.
TheBuj'inej'j'Doctor
RocFutkenron
TBODB n/JBK BCG/JTMRtP
Winnowed ‘Witticisms
His Roar.
A diffident and embarrassed poet had
been forcibly dragged Into a salon to
be the lion at some social function. He
felt so out of place that he lost his
tongue completely. At last his hostess,
who had hoped that he would show off
bettor than ho was doing, tried to get
him to say somsthlng poetical. "Come,
my dear poet,” she cooed, "say some
thing to us." The poet was entirely at
a loss for a subject of conversation, so
he sel«cted the first one that came to
hand. "Have you remarked madam."
he said, bashfully, "that this year’s
pawn tickets are pink?"
Jumbo Jam,.
Country Correspondent In Th* Fowler
(Kans.) Gazette.
Weather damp and cold, and Ralph,
our Ofteen-yesr-old lad, has been down
with the croup, kids all sick, the little
dog has the sniffles, some of the neigh
bors’ cats have hnd (Its, one of our
hogs broke down In the hip, most of
the Gamble children are down w|th
colds, and, to take the neighborhood as
a whole, we are somewhat under the
weather.
“Untight Unseen."
From The Fllegende Blaetter.
"I have found Just the party for you.
Lord Duncan—a lady, with a dowry of
half a million.”
“And tfhen can I see this lady?”
“Just keep thinking of the dowry and
don't ask to see her.')
Cold Storage.
From The Meggendorfer Blaetter.
"Where Is the live chicken I bought
for our party?"
8h«—"I put It In our new jee-box.
"Yes, I can help you. If you won't think I am preaching,” said the Bust-
ness Doctor. "Any man's success In life le purely a matter of his morals.
No man has ever made a permanent failure In tho commercial world *0°
waa morally sound. Immorality Is 01-
penslve. It costa more money to W
crooked morally than It docs to 8"
straight. It doe* not matter nearly
much tvhat a man’s income Is as It docf
what his expenditures are. It I' tnc
money ho wastes that makes nr mar,
his success, and not what he earns.
"If you hope for big success In the
business world, scan carefully the over
head expense account. If you hope f ■ :
personal prosperity, pay more attention
to your expenditure* than to your in
come, for as you reduce the mono)
spent In frivolity—In sin. If you like th'
word better—your Income and your
earning capacity will Increase In direct
proportion. What you spend not or .■
takes money out of your purse, but oh
very habits which cost you this mon-'.
ore tho things which Incapacitate
for earning more. ,,,
"There la no way on earth save
one way of putting down your expenm-
• tures In plain figures for a month a”'
then carefully analysing them. Once done, this will enable you to nnd m •
weak spot In your make-up. When a man has discovered his a r ‘;, h
weakness, he has settled, once for all, the question of his success, it "
can overcome this wenkneas, he will win. If the weakness Is stronger tnso
his moral character, he had just as well go Jump off the dock once fnr »
"There Is no better Illustration than the time-honored one of the chaty;
It Is just as strong throughout ita entire length as the weakest UnK. “
Yherc Is one defective link In the entire chain, then all the care and tim
put In on the others Is wasted effort, for at tho drat pull the chain will l»j l
at this weak point. If you ftnd that one weak spot and correct It.
tuttng another link or strengthening It, when tho strain comes the emu*
formation will most likely withstand the strain. , ,,
"Where are you weakest? What Is tho easiest place In your character.
Is It tho disposition to loaf round the rathskellers? I» It the love of m;
glrlr with fuzxy yellow hair? Is It tho time wasted trying to All two paw
ls It In the time and money wasted In your club? You alone can tell, an
If you are In doubt, your personal expense account will tell you th' 'W”;
"An ancient lady, Mrs. Achilles, took her son to the River Btyx an •
soused him In Its limpid waters to make him Invulnerable to the attacks «*
his enemies. The heel by which she held him remained dry, am! In t"*
course of human events It became known that In this one spot, at [east, nc
waa vulnerable, and It waa here his enemies attacked him and landed nim.
You have your vulnerable point. No one knows It §0 welkaa you, and If >' “
will take, the trouble to cover this one point from the attack of that g re5 ‘
enemy, immorality, you will have guaranteed your success.
"Remember, I am not giving you this talk from the point of the
school teacher; I am not advocating morality for morality's sake, but
advocating morality for the sake of the success It brings; I am advising ••
because It 1* the reason fit the expense which Is sapping' your business sue-
cet*. .
"Find the. weak link, the vulnerable point, and then sit right down an
hold communion with yourself and aee If you love beat your besetting
your hopes of success. There Is no such thing a* compromise. No compro
mise with Immorality was ever other than a failure. No strong man ">■
compromise nnd no weak man can make a success of It. Put In n. new l |n |”
Cover your heel. This Is the one rood to success, and It’s up to you to t» he
or leave It."
Insulted.
A strapping German with big bead*
of perspiration streaming down hie face
was darting in and out of the aisles of
a Philadelphia department store.
His excited actions attracted the at
tention of all the salespersons, and they
hardly knew what to make of tt. A
hustling young man of the clothing de.
partment walk*.: up to him and asked.
"Are you looking for something In
men's clothing?"
"No." ha roared; "not men's clothing;
I can't D nl1
His Limit.
From Th* Cleveland Plain Dealt!.
"I love you!” he cried, throwing 311
strmlnt to th* winds.
"Do you really aud truly love me-
answered. still unyielding.
"I swear I #iu."
"How much?" , .. ,,1,1
"How do I know how much!
my heart and soul and strength m.
•"d"—
"Walt. Couldn't you lev 1
more?"
. "Dearest. If I loved you am m
don't think 1 could stand It.
"Why not?”
"I might want to marry you