The Atlanta Georgian. (Atlanta, GA.) 1906-1907, August 15, 1906, Image 6

Below is the OCR text representation for this newspapers page.

The Atlanta Georgian. THE ATLANTA GEOROTaN iffed JOHN TEMPLE GRAVES, Editor. P. L. SEELY, President. Subscription Rites: One Yetr $4.50 Six Months 2.50 Three Months 1.25 By Cirrier, per week 10c Published Every Afternoon Except Sundsy by THE OEORGfAN CO. it 25 W. Alsbimi Street, Atlsnti, Gi. Iztrred ns zMSHid-el.i* matter Ap-ll *. ISOS, it tbn Postogle, It Atlanta. Os.. Older set of centre.. or llsrrb 1 ITS. Dr. McCandless and Pure Food. Whether the pure food bill passes or dies of neglect upon this Anal dnv of legislative session. The Georgian Is moved to an expression of admiration for the earn estness, consecration and consistent energy with which It has been advocated by Dr. J. M. McCandless, of this city. * As a private cltlxen. with no Interest at atake, with no object In view, and with no purpose but to serve his day and generation, according to his lights. Or. Mc Candless has fought for (his bill In season and out of sea- son. He has garnered Information, he has marshalled facts, he has presented briefs and with his brain and his hand and his energies he has given hts time nnd his talents to a strong and legitimate effort to convince the reason and the Interest of the legislature and of the people of the necessity for this wholesome bill. If It should triumph, why, of course, Its passage will reflect directly uiion the eloquence of the advocates upon the floor. There will he no less of reflection In Its triumph u|mn the pit lent and persistent devotion of •he brilliant chemist and cltlsen who was Its Inspiration. And If It falls and goes down to wait Its time before an other body of law-makers In the state, Dr. McCandlesa can feel that he nt least has done his duty with a sin gle mind and has spared no atom of his manifold equip ment to carry bis convictions to a successful end. i ond faro from the travelers to Coney Island, up with their own Impudence-and greed, and their long Immunity from punishment and regulation, they defy the courts and trample upon the rights of the people— and the people themselves. An application has been made to forfeit the charter of the company, and the whole Country would sympa thise with such a movement. Nothing short of some such radical action, It seems, will bring the Metropol itan Moloch to Its senses. It would furnish s whole some lesson to corporations all over the country' who abase their franchises and over-ride the rights of the l>eople. Every lirge city has an Instance In point and we ourselves would not have to go so very far from home to And-one. , . The Transcendent Question of Saxon • Rule. A Visit to Mars. We know all about It now. The president of the Society for Psychical Re search, an organisation Instituted for the purpose of see ing ghosts and explaining the whyness of the thus, has just taken a little trip to Mara. This blood-red patron planet of war la something like 141,000.000 miles away,but a little thing like that did not disturb the adventurous spirit of President Sackvllle I-eyson. who disrobed him self of his flesh and started out on his aerial journey without so much as a celestial Baedeker to guide him. He simply projected his astral body Into space and within forty minutes he was there and back, after an exhaustive study of tho ethnic nnd commercial condi tions on the planet, and was giving out his experiences to the papers. Ho tells us that there are two races of men up there, one so tall that he did not reach to their knees, while the other race Is so small that the tiny specimen did not reach to the visitor's knees. Just how far It Is between the knee-cap and the kibe of Leysoti's astral shanks Is not stated. Tho Martians, we are told, do not wear any clothes, but are abundantly covered with hair. The larger specimens have no nose, but have two eyes, one In each temple. The smaller specimens have a single * 1 eye. which, like tho curl of the celebrated little girl, was right In the middle of the forehead. The little fellows have web feet and glide along on the moss as If they were skating. They live In boles In the ground, while the big fellows make habitations of the rocks and seem to be very happy. It Is n matter of regret that he did not bring us some dcflnlte data about the cminls which are, by com mon consent, the most remarkable features of Mars. We would like to know If they are owned and controlled by the state, or by private capital, whether Chinese labor was successfully employed In their construction, how sanitation Is preserved and a few other facts which might have been of value to our own canal commission. But iierhaps we should be satlsfled. The president of the Society for Psychical Research has given Us a great deal of Information. Among other things, this thing of eating Ice cream and shrimp after 18 o'clock at night Is* bound to get In Its work. The B. R. T. Aggressions. ft has been a long time since the American people were treated to a more flagrant instance of the high handed Insolence of corporate power thnn that dis played by (he Brooklyn Rapid Transit Compi-iy on Supday and Monday, when fully a thousand p.s - wre bodily ejected from cabs running to Coney Ist-i q.Ijr because. In pursuance of a decision of the con., n.iiidod down by Justice Gsynor, they refused to pay it double (are for a single trip between the metropolis and the celebrated seaside resort. Not only were a thousand people thrown from the cars, at the Imminent risk of life and limb, but oue young girl waa actually killed as a direct result of this treatment. Having been ejected from n car, although the had paid the double fare, she was Immediately run down and killed by a passing trolley on a bridge. * No effort whatever was made by the company to Identify and hand over to Justice the trainmen who were responsible for the death of the girt. This conduct was of a piece with the Impudence which the corpora tion has shown throughout the entire light, and some thing of the strength with which It has entrenched Itaelf may be gathered from the fact that on the second day at the disorders the police no longer pretended to make • non-partisan effort to preserve the peace but opeuly aided and abetted the railroad employees In throwing off passengers who declined to pay a second fare. The higher ofllclals of Ibe road make no show of re pentance whatever. They blocked the roads with delay ed trains and kopt hundreds of people from returning home until the late hours of the night. They caused trouble and Inconvenience of every kind, and when the (acta were presented to them they went further than Boss Tweed';, cynical query, "What are you going to do about It?' and even intimated that they would make the ■ervfce leea satisfactory than it Is at present. All this, be It understood, because the patrons of the road were acting upon e decision of the court and were refusing to pay a second fare. It baa been shown that the subway, whose passen ger* a* • rule travel for a long distance, makes a profit on t cents fares, since the coat ta not more than 8 cents each. It has been shown that the uniform fare of 5 cents for surface car travel makes a good net average p.oflt, and that tbera la no excuse (or demanding a see. There appears upon (hit page today a letter of un usual Interest addressed to Mr. William Riley Boyd by a distinguished and thoughtful physician of Norwich, Conn., upon the absorbing ond vital question of the ne gro and his relations to the white race In Die South and In the country at large. Mr. Boyd recently wrote a letter to The Indianapolis News which has been widely commented upon through out the country, and out of that contribution has grown this correspondence with Dr. Mann, of Connecticut. The letter of Dr. Mann Is broadly and deeply signifi cant and we commend It to the careful consideration of our readera today because of the light which It sheds upon the aentlment and the sympathy of the Northern people toward this vexed question of the negro In tho Smith. The comment of Dr. Mann Is upon an editorial which recently appeared In The Georgian claiming that tho real friend of tho negro and not his enemy, was that ma.i who recognising his limitations and the hopeless ness of his position under the-present environment, hu manely sought to find for him another home and another country In order that he mjght reach his full develop ment both as a cltlsen and as a man. To this theory Dr. Mann gives his full indorsement and declares that he goes even farther than the editor of The Georgian 'n his Indorsement of the principle In volved. Dr. Mann states In underscored Italics that ho agrees absolutely with the editor of The Georgian that the beat thing for the negro as well ns for the white man la that the relative Inferiority of the negro man should be recognized definitely and clearly In every relation of life. Upon this - proposition The Georgian has based Its whole attitude toward the negro at the preaent time. Tho Georgian is uot a partisan In the present Georgia cam paign nnd doeB not propose to he. The matter of per sonalities has little to do with our attitude or our align ment. We lake no stock In the abuse of the prominent Georgians who are candidates before the people because we are fully prepared to believe that each nnd everyone of them In character, In record, and In capacity, Is equal to the responsibility of serving Georgia and of making n good nnd acceptable governor of. the state. The things that concern thoughtful and Impartial men, as we nre, are the great vltul issues'around which this campaign la wrapped, and among those Issues The Georgian has nlwnys recognised as the one- transcendent and overwhelming question the prudent and atatesman- likn consideration of tho negro and his relations to the people of the South. It may be snld frankly that we rec ognise as valid some of the objections to the methods of disfranchisement proposed by statesmen upon the side of complete disfranchisement In this campaign. We have been Impreased by the objections that have been urged and'are fully prepared to believe that there must be a better way to handle this question and to legally disfranchise nnd subordinate the negro In our general civilisation and In our political life. We fully believe that with the wide and free dis cussion of this question, tho minds of thoughtful men must havo been and doubtless are Impreased by the dif ficulty and the rompleslty of this proposition, but we aro also fully prepared to believe that If the weight of thta responsibility should rest upon any one of these can didates for the high office of governor, the educative value of this discussion would move the successful can didate or the atKcesafjil legislator to a due and serious consideration of these apprehensions and to the wisest most unprejudiced and most broad-minded search for bet ter methods to perfect and to complete the disfran chisement nnd subordination of the negro race to tho Anglo Baxon people who havo made and ruled this con tinent Now with this much said we desire to say that we deem It a matter of supreme and overshadowing Impor tance that this election should not pass without some definite and clear-cut announcement made In thunder tones at the ballot box that this Is a white man’s government, n white mnn's country and that the white race must rule It and will rule It to the end of time, and that this election curries this announcement In dcflnlte and legal form thnt the negro Is an Inferior and that the white man Is the superior, and that the superior must and will rule and dominate tho Inferior In society and In politics In this republic. In.the heat and passion of this furious canvass men have had little time to give to this question and to Its perfect solution that tine and deliberate consideration which Its Importance and Its dangers demand. We must confess that we ourselves hnve failed to reach any defi nite and final conclusion ns to the best and most effec tive method of disfranchising the negro. .But we have absolute confidence In tho patriotism. In the Integrity and In the Intelligence of the Anglo 8axon clement thnt Is struggling for supremacy In this campaign, nnd we ex- presa the further and most profound nnd fsr-rer.chlng confidence that when this election Is settled, If It be settled upon the lines of this policy, thut the men who win ond the friends who stand behind them, lawyers, legislators, statesmen, publicists and patriots, will unite with one accord to put this decision of the ballot box Into effect In the wisest, safoat and most conservative way which will stand the tests of the courts and the trials of the coming years. Meanwhile, let us remember that a defeat of this general proposition here and now carries encouragement of untold weight slid force to the negro race In the prosecution of their Inudable but dangerous ambition; that It will Inevitably prodneo strife and friction In the Increased aggression of the lower race and that the only safe thing to do. and the only wise thing to do now, since the Issue la Joined and (he question at a white heat of solution. Is to ex| rest In thunder tones at the ballot box the ultimatum at the Caucasian race, and to rely confidently upon the combined wisdom tnd pru dence of the men who make the laws for this stale and for this aectlon. to put this verdict Into execution with skill and discretion and a comprehensive regard tor lib erty and for law. Wc slate this proposition u|wu our honor with a high aud sincere regard and sympathy far the Inferior raco Joined to the supreme InBtlnct < which makeR us consider the future of the superior race. There Is no malice and no unkind- ness In us toward the negro. The sooner bis status Is settled and be la removed as the bone of contention from the factions of this Anglo Saxon republic, the sooner will he drift Into peace, prosperity and develop ment, and the sooner will the Anglo Baxon race react Into an attltpde of Justice, a love of liberty and consti tutional law.' There is wisdom snongh, there Is conscience enough, and there Is justice enough inf these Southern states to deal Justly and honorably with this Inferior race when once we have written In Indisputable statutes the doc trine of while supremacy and of negro Inferiority. Let us announce to the world and to our own people by our coming ballots what we Intend to do, and then let us rely upon an unfailing wladom and the unbroken history of these Southern Saxons to do the right and the wisest thing for both races and for the great future of this great and storm-tried people. ' There Is no pollflcs In this position. Then Is no partisanship and no deceit. The editor of Tho Georgian years. lf-preservatltMi i has been tho advocate of this policy for t the fortunes | Before the contentions.of this personal controversy were brought forth, or time had formed a Itoke Smith, a Clark Howell, a Journal or a Constitution as Its evafigels. the editor of this paper, with a single motive and a clear conception, was sowing In the West and In the East and In the militant North the seeds of that great doctrine of Saxon rule whose fruits are evident In the liberal and progressive letter of Dr. Mann, of Connecticut. We register no change, we record no new Idea. We write no change of front, but we simply stand now upon the position which we assumed In 1893 at the great Chau tauqua at Islington, Ky.. when we plead then In the exact language that we use today for the absolute, the evident and the Imperative necessity of establishing defi nitely and by statute the relative positions of these op posite and antagonistic races In the South. . We pray Ood that the people of Georgia, unbllnded by faction and unvexed by prejudice, keeping their eyes firmly fixed upon the great future of our people and our children, will settle this question In the spirit of patriot ism. the spirit of statesmanship and In the aplrit of fear- leas troth. CHOI iiy] KNICKBRBOCI XER S| j GOSSIP Growth and Progress of the New South Rader this head'will appear from time to tils* Information Ulnstrstlm the remarkable development of Us South which daterres somethin* mors than pass ing attention. The South Sells Engines to the East. Nothing which we. have yet encountered IJluzt rates'more completely the material growth and progress of the South than a recent article pub- IIshed In "Advance," of Birmingham, ehowlng how a home concern of that cltyfjs manufacturing stationery englnee and belling them to the East and West. It Is pointed out that this would not be very remarkable If the engines were of some special type covered by patents, but they are, on the contrary, Corl|en engines, which have been a standard type ever since the centennial of 1874. Mr. John Sparrow, of "Advance/* had an Interesting Interview with W. D. Tynes, of the Hardle-Tynee Company, which manufactures these en gines, and was told that the chief superiority of hts engines consisted in strength- weight and efficiency. Continuing he eald: "No, we do not find that our comparatively long distance from the the Northern and Eastern markets Is,a drawback, nor are we conscious of shy prejudice against us on account of .our Southern location. Eastern and Western people are keenly practical, and they have their share of the American spirit of fair play. They know wflat they want, and they will pay for It, no matter where It comes from. “Yes, our territory In steadily widening. Some of our engines have gone Into Bouth American countries, and we have established a connec tion In Japan, which promises well." "The road has not always been smooth?" I said. "Oh, no," replied Mr. Tynes, "we have had our*periods bf discourage ment. but there never was a time when we lost faith In ultimate result*. "The fire was a good thing for us. I might say It was the turning point. Several years ago we were burned out, you know—total loss, plant, patterns, everything. It wee a hard blow. We had been making s good engine, as we thought, and were booked away ahead. There was nothing to do but to start over. So we determined to get the best talent In .the engineering profession to be had.” (Ah, I thought, this Is the key to the business—the genius which snatches victory from defeat and turns disaster Into success.) "We employed experts of high repute." continued Mr. Tynes, smiling— my eye must have dashed appreciation—"and with some suggestions from us they gave us designs and patterns wfilch embody the latest and most approved Ideas of engine construction as applied to those modlflcstlone,of the Corliss to which I referred when we began talking. Consequently we have s distinct advantage over our competitors who have not kept pace with the Improvements of more modern engineering construction. "And our machine shops anil foundry, as rebuilt, are the mest perfectly adapted to their requirements of any In this country. There are plants which may contain more brick and mortar, but none makes a better show ing architecturally, or Is better equipped for the handling of raw materials nnd the finished product In,our line of business. ' quite frequently our plant' Is Inspected by. machinists nnd founders In other .portions of the country who wish to duplicate It In whole or In part. We let them copy the .plans If they ask for that privilege. It's all for the good of the trade." '•Are you a Southern man?' t asked. "Both Mr. Hsrdle and myself are Southern men, but neither of ua re gards that as a handicap," he said humorously. "I see no reaeon why Southern men should not succeed as manufacturers." “The civil war proved that the men of the South were as Ingenious and fertile.In resources as the so-called Yankees,” I suggested. . "Probably you are correct," eald Mr. Tynes. thoughtfully. "Now let us look over the plant." MR. JORDAN HA8 FULL POWER TO ACT. THE NORTH WITH THE 80UTH ON THE NEGRO Mr. William Riley Boyd, Atlanta. Ga. My Dear Sir; Yours of Tuesday last rnine duly. I am much pleased with your letter and should thoroughly enjoy meeting you and discussing thl* subject at our leisure. We might not agree In ell points, but would be wise enough to respect each other's opin ions. I feel about Anderaonvllle very much as 1 do about the Black Hole of Calcutta—that both havo been dis cussed enough. Let us drop the sub ject and forget It. That does not mean that 1 shall forget It and the people of the South keep pushing It to the front again. Let us both forget It and have pence on that subject. There are some large question! for the world to solve still staring us In the face nnd neither you nor I are too old to lend our Influence and advice to the oncoming generation toward solv ing them. The question of the per petuation of the union nnd Its cost have gone Into history. It will require a welt until about the year 195» be fore an unprejudiced, accurate history of that cltll war, which shall do Jus tlce to both sldds. can be written. I General I-ee could have written his own memoirs, as did General Grant, the two,would have been a wonderful old to "tome future historian. Grant’s Is singularly correct as far as It goes and so would General Lee's, as was uleo General Gordon's. You sent me a pamphlet of selec tions for schools for anniversary of General Lee's birth, which I hnve read with great Interest, and say amen to every sentiment therein expressed. But of all your correspondence end In closures the most Interesting Is the editorial from The Atlanta Georgian, "Prlend, Not Enemy to the Negro." There Is n question worth the pro- foundest study, sympathy and states manship of the future, in the main I agree with that editorial, and for year* have advocated leaving the negro to Inhabitants of the several states In which he Is found for treatment os each several states shall decide. The orst blunder ever committed by the United States within my remembrance wns what Is known as the "carpet bag government" Immediately following the war. If Lincoln had lived thnt never would have happened because wiser counsels would have prevailed. If the negro could tie comparatively equally distributed among the whole forty-live or forty-six states the question of hts rest status would be much quicker de cided. The majority of the native whites of the North cannot yet be mnde to acknowledge that "the best thing far the negro as well as the white man it that the relative inferiority of the negro man should be recognized definitely and clearly in every relation s life,” or they are not ready to nc- nowledge It. They are backward, like the Presbyterian church In renting Its creed to correspond with present civ ilisation. The movers and formers of public opinion here North are getting ready to Indorse that underlined sentence from the editorial In question. That editorial, as a whole, so well conforms to my own freely expressed opinions, that there Is little room for discussion between you and I. It Is very well written: very well put. I go a little further In believing that within n thousand or two years tho negro will be a thing of the past, or the customs of the earth will take on some entirely new phase hardly yet dreamed of. Life Is s very funny prop osition or a very serious one, as one happens or chooses to look out upon It. I believe the Great Spirit that gov erns the universe Is doing the best possible with the material He has In hand, and that finally perfection will result. It Is up to us to help Him In every possible manner to the extent of our ability and knowledge, nnd not be finding fault with our neighbor for not doing hts work just as we feel like dic tating sometimes. With best wishes. Yours, T. H. MANN. Norwich, Conn., Aug. I, 1904, (The Progressive Parmer, Raleigh, N. C.) If we may Judge the temper of the farmers of the South by that of those In North and Bouth Carolina, Mr. Rich ard Cheatham, secretary of the South em Cotton Association, Is going to prove a millstone about the neck of the organization until his resignation Is received and accepted—Inetanter. “We are not going to be led by con fessed gamblers," was the undertone at the South Carolina Farmers' Inst! tute last week, and from Georgia t similar cry was heard. Mr. Harvle Jordan, who acted so promptly In the case of Vice President Peters Isst year. Is not expected to trifle with this far more serloua offence of a higher and more trusted official of the associa tion. And the hypocrisy of Mr. Cheat ham makes hts primary offenct even more Insupportable. The chief owner of The Cotton Journal, that paper has been carrying on a campaign against cotton gambling and bucket shops, whereupon a cotton gambler Is quoted as saying to Cheatham; "Why do you let your paper do this? Don't you know It Is hurting us?" to which this "friend of the cottoQ growers" wlnk- Ingly replied: “Oh, well, that's Just to fool the farmers, you know. And they are biting, too, to beat the bsnd: why, just this morning our stack of sub scriptions received la eight Inches high!" It was Mr. Cheatham's own sllckness which enabled him to catch up with the other cotfon gamblers In the department of agriculture last year. There's nothing plainer than that the Cotton Association must be freed from hit Influence If It Is to continue to command that confidence of South ern cotton growers to which Its pre vious good Work would entitle It. Air, Jordan should act Since The Progressive Farmer seeks for Information tt Is our duty to say to him that under the constitution of'the Cotton Growers’ Association Mr. Har ris Jordan has abundant power to take Anal action at any time In the case of Mr. Cheatham, his secretary. If he does not act. It Is because he does not choose to exercise his constitutional authority.—Ed. Georgian. Biennial Elections,' But Perennial Politics. To the Editor of The Georgthn: We have biennial elections In Geor gia. That Is ti> say, the'governor holds office for two years. Reformers favor biennial elections—less politics, you know. . But listen, ye ardent reformers who would reform man from the outside, and who think that laws can change men aaireadlly as men can change laws —listen: We have biennia! elections, but we have perennial politics. In those lucky states that have annual elections a campaign can not well last more that! one year. But. since our present cam paign for governor began, this unfor tunate state has made nearly one and a half revolutions around the sun. It aetually began before Governor Ter rell waa Inducted Into office. It seems to me that the chief prob lem In >hts state Is not how to take the black man out of politics, b(it how to take the politics out of the white man. JAMES J. DOOLINO. Atlanta, Ga. ABOUT PEOPLE By Privet* tossed Wire. New York, Au*. 15.—The last lime I saw Joaquin Miller, the “poet of the Sierras," was In his nest among the hills—"The Heights"—about ten miles out of San Francisco. He wore high- top boots, burksklii breeches with a fringe down the sides, a brown velvet Jacket and a red silk cap. This morning Joaquin Miller eat on the veranda of a Saratoga cottage la the same red silk cap, with the same flowing white beard and hair, but In a spotless, natty and modern gray suil Ills eyes had the same kindly, shrewd twinkle as he looked me over and tried to recall meeting me. He said; "1 came- here for the quiet and to begin life all over again. I lost all the plates of my books, all my auto- graphs of my beloved friend*—Walter Whitman and Tennyson among the rest —that I had taken to the Bohemian Club for safe-keeping—everythin* of mine and Ihe books given to me—but I will start In again and grow with the new and more magnificent San Fran cisco. You know, we were a place where the Insane and sick used to come—where people came when they wanted to commit suicide, and wh»r» the rapid pace of living never slowed down. "All that Is gone now. There Is no more high tension, no more Insane, no more Invalids and nsver u suicide. Mar tial law enforced the drinking of water and people hnd lo sleep In the open sir and everybody Is well and young can>l nnthlflAiia •• and ambitious.' "Was martial law disagreeable, or did you feel It was a protection?" "It was grand. Little Funston was a wonder In his management, nnd tvas relieved from command only when he was worn out.' It waa rather hard sometimes - that people were not al lowed to go Into their own houses, hut the soldiers had no way of discrimi nating between owners and looters, and had to carry out orders.” t naked him about Saratoga nnd what he thought of, the ever return ing convulsions about gambling. The mildly shrewd look came Into his eyes again and he evaded * direct answer by saying: "Nothing can Impels beautiful, rest ful Saratoga. I have been coming here for forty years. It always Is the same, only , that the trees have grown larger and the town more like a glorious park. "Races—the race—oh, yes, of course, the races. Well, why not? They dis turb the quiet some and make the streets rattle with carriages and make the hotels congested and the songs of the birds are lost In the noise, nnd fashion gets In before all else, but the races belong to the horses. Yes. I think 1 will go to the races." Then Joaquin Miller took off his red silk cap and put on a broad-brimmed soft black hat and walked with me down to Ihe corner. He will stay In Saratoga for a long rest, working a* he feels Inclined. Tile Road to “Success.” “A NOBLE TYPE OF GOOD, HEROIC WOMANHOOD" From Tlx* Chicago Journal. | WIumi Mocnmna, In the Hhnketpenre play, opined that Antony must lean' Cleopatra utterly^ Hnohnrbua, who waa Just returned from Egypt, replied: I not; i*r her “Never; he Age can not withe- ller infinite* variety.” nor custom atnlt that ... marly they were fnarlmited, but it la still true of every woiuuu. n« It wna of Cleo patra. thnt her variety la Infinite. loug aud Intimately you may have known n noiiinii, y#ti can never predict wlwr alte will do tu any given aet of dreuni»taiiceii. There wa* Mrs. Rol»ert I-nig lev. of At lanta. for example. Holiert had lived with her for several years, and yet he did uot have the remotest Idea of what waa In atore for hltu when, upon hla return to hla taiard* lug txaiae the other evening, he uegleeted to Iteatow the eoatomary marital aalute upon her. If he had. then, of cuaroe, he blui to kl*» her. Laiigler | from him In a playful war. where* wlfey became angered, crying: •’tYoa won’t kl*» me, won't you?” then proceeded to knock him ’down and •tamp olt him until her strength waa ex hla wile, lie will remetulwr, too, the re mark of the upright Judge n« the rnee waa diainlM4>d. that a man ought always to klsa the wife of hla Ummmm when he cornea Am the poet truly ttjra: 'What will not woman, gentle woman, •la re When strong affection stirs her spirit up?” Mrs. Murphy, of Atlaota, Ua., registered at The Herald office today. By WEX JONES. Let everything go In the hustle for dough. And never let np For a billion or so. To Umbo with youth To make It a trillion. And then when your atore la a trillion or o’er— Why keep on a-hUNtllug And rustling for more. Keep on, never atop; Keep oil till you drop. Kvery dollar rou udas Home other will cop. Keep on till you die And then from the sky You may watch your r~ Make your dollar-birds ; WHEN THE TA8K IS DONE. atJl done: one that has fairly earn***! nnd spent In pride of neart r.n.1 j^Wtnnc# eg blnoQ Much wage*. Ik* they cotiuted Ituu or good. Aa Time, the old task-master, was moved K y; t 1 And having warred and suffered, and pass ed Negroes Bound Over. Mpei'lal to The Ueorgtati. • * Home, On., Aug. IB.—Will Anderson and Tom Crankfield, both colored, were bound over to the city cvirt yesterday by the recorder on 1250 bonds each, charged with larceny. First Ntw Bale of Cotton. Mpectsl to The Georgian. Augusts, On., Aug. 15.—F. D. Moore continues to hold the record for getting the tint ba/e of Richmond county cot ton on the Augusta market, he bring ing the first bale to Augusta venter- day, and placed It In the warehouse of Spears A Pilcher. The bale was raised within live miles of Augusta and was ginned yesterday morning. Professor Willis, of Newport, who modestly styles himself "the world', i rreatest palmist and clairvoyant," told Urz. Fish something that-happened to come true, and on that statement and from her press agent's work he ha. acquired a reputation and amassed a considerable fortune. The other morn ing Mrs. Fish met him on the avenue. Off came her glove and soon they both were lost In tracing the tiny line.. Suddenly Mrs. Fish caught sight of Harry Lehr hurrying toward the flor ist's for hla morning gardenia. "Harry, come here. 1 want you. I am not going away. Harry. The professor says I must not." The professor hastened to assure her that he could not Impress too firmly upon her inlnd the necessity for not leaving Newport at present. Just what the seer predicted for Mrs. Fish thst came true the mlsstress of Crossways Is telllftg no one. Mrs. Reggie ' an- derbilt Joins Mrs. Fish In a realized prediction. Robert Fulton Ludlow, of Claverark. N. Y„ the grandson of Robert Fulton and Charles L. Haswell. of this city, the only living man who saw Fulton s steamboat, the "Clermont," steaming up the Hudson, met • ■•terday at the New Yorker's home. I’hc men wer, brought together b.v Mr. Helnstand, chairman of the Fulton Memorial As sociation, which Is raising Hoo.ooo to S ut up a monument on Riverside drive. (r. Ludlow said the family would al low Fulton's body to be moved to the monument. Haswell, though »•. «’ take part In the dedication If he Is still alive. GEORGIANS IN GOTHAM. By Private Lenaed Wire. Now York, Am*. 15,—Here arc aorae or i« vlaltora lit Now York today: ATLANTA—II. P. Arnold. Mrs T. <?• Crpnshnw. W. Ft. Hudson, It. Joy. JL J. C. Murks, Mrs. N. 1*. Powell. IL ' • Krotitieimer, Miss M. Mrt'nntry. I-Brn'ie“- ton. M. C. King, J. A. Lowe. C. IV. 1 *»• lip*. AI’UT’KTA—W. A. Khriard. MACON—!!. It. McLean. „ SAVANNAH—K. N. Nneliergrr. IV. s. IVny. It. Welter. J. W. Fitzgerald. ■' llognn. <». W. Tlrdentnn. Miss I. Tledeiazn. Mrs. A. Hornet. H. Ilonneman. I. H"““» man, U. It. Foltz. «■ M. Trouss. THIS DATE IN HISTORY n AUGUST 15. 10H-Kt. Stephen, first king of Hongs ry. died. , Philippa, oneen of Edward HI or England. died. lfilS—Frederick Wllllaui I of Proaata !">«• 17€fi— Na|H>leoii Bonaparte born. Wet! Mey 21. WB. ,. . 1771—81 r Walter Hcntt. novella!, horn. Idea HeptemlHf 21. IB2. MK-FIrat atoue laid for the Arc do Tri- -rirni piour mm i'" hip " , #llli otuphe, celebratlnjc tho oacrea* or tn< Grand Amir of Anaterlttx. 1S07—Frnncola Julea Urevy. prfoW^* 7 France, Imro. IHed Hepteinber IS51 ’ 1512—Hetrolt an (rendered to the Brftleb- 1W— Mra. John A. Logan horn. lm^FIrst paper puMtohed In filiform. !*• *ne«l nt Monterey. .. Kelr llanlle. Kngllsh Isbor Wtdet nwl member of parliament, horn. Itt5-Kn*»*hliua. Japan, deatroyed by HrltUh fleet. 1S79— Ethel Barrymore, actreaa. Item. Uff-MrkMe Sfllma. aingrr. died. 15®—Convent of the barred Heart, York, deatroyed by tin*. IMt-Iteeelvera appointed for the Northern Pari fie railroad. . UM—Explorer Wellman and nartr arHveJ at Tromaoe. having abandoned attemp to reach the north pole. Nee