The Golden age. (Atlanta, Ga.) 1906-1915, April 22, 1915, Page 11, Image 11
April 22, 1915
Prisons and work houses are full al
ways,
Hearts are heavy and hours are
long,
For sin conquers when alcohol slays,
The efforts of the good and the
work of the strong.
Stalwart boys with faces fair,
And hearts that mean to do right,
March straight into the Deamon’s
lair;
And, we fear, forever have lost the
good fight.
Lascivious acts and the gambling
den,
Flourish where Rum commands;
Fond mothers wear coronets of gray,
when
Drink, the souls of our boys de
mands
For ages long, women have sobbed
And the world has suffered its loss,
For men, of great minds, have been
ruthlessly robbed
SECOND LETTER ON HIN
DRANCES TO EDUCATION.
(Continued from ;>auc 19.)
children that the parent has not
found, but when she tries to put the
best methods into use, the parent,
whose education and thinking stop
ped years ago, will say at once, “My
children are wasting time, and should
give the time they spend with all that
foolishness to their books.”
Times change—move forward
progress—and all parents and teach
ers should move forward with the
times—the forming of Parent-Teach
er Associations will help to keep the
parent who has any brains to develop
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AWAKE !
OMA BELLE BROWN.
And character cast off as dross.
Daughters the path to crime have
trod,
When lured by the bead and foam,
Have lost the memory of Truth and
God,
And forgot the teachings of home.
Love and confidence have been wan
tonly killed,
Wives have seen husbands go
down,
All sense of values by the victim is
lost;
And never a remedy, yet has been
found.
For you who have led, have slept
While the world in an ocean of
wine has been sunk.
Awake! give heed to those who have
wept,
For yours some day may be found
with the drunk.
in touch with every-day needs and
will also help teacher and parent to
work together for the best interests
of the child.
When the mother and teacher can
co-operate in behalf of the child
twice the good can be accomplished.
Lakeland, Fla. Tessa W. Roddey.
THE UNEXPECTED.
(Continued from pa ,r e 3.'
The seamen’s trained eyes were not
leng in making out that the light
itself was not moving. It couldn’t be
a ship, for it was one ball of light
instead of many; nor a lighthouse,
the glare was too red; nor a buoy?
No, they knew their steady glow too
well. Then what was it, they were
getting nearer and nearer to? It
couldn’t be an hallucination, for all
of them saw it. They could not tell
how far they were from it, but they
were bending every energy. The
light was growing—from a ball like
a man’s hat, it had grown to the
size of a carriage wheel and, “Look ”
cried Maybeth, “it is shaping up like
a candle flame.”
Even Marie forgot her stoic silence.
“I see some ta’l, dark something,
outlined against the light,” she ex
claimed. “Could it be a sailing vessel
on fire?”
“God forbid.” said Mrs. Montrose,
“that our bones should be dashed to
pieces like that.”
“But I tell you.” persisted Marie,
“there is a —there’s more than one
tall, dark shadow! Can’t you see, that
is smoke, too?”
A groan of disappointment was all
the answer that came, for they could
see it was a fire, that was sure, but
what? Where? How foolish; was
there anything else but a burning
ship that could produce a rea 1 fire in
mid-ocean? Surely not.
The men relaxed from their nerve
straining race. Making a telescope
of his hands, Devereaux declared,
“Miss LeCrew is right, there are
dark skeleton-like shadows between
us and that fire, or—whatever it is.”
“Holy Saints, presarve us!” ex
claimed O’Garity, “see that? Watch
these swells, Sam,” he cried excitedly
to the big brawny fellow on the port
THE GOLDEN AGE
side of the bow; “Sure as iver I live,
there’s land not far off.”
“Where can we be?” asked Dever
eaux.
“That’s too much for me. I’ve rode
the old Atlantic many a day in both
rough and smooth seas, an’ I know
ivery knot of the reg’lar track; but
this is new sailin’ ter me. Yet I’m
fellin’ ye we are nearin’ land.”
As gradually as the hidden im
print comes out on the negative in
the hands of the photographer, as
the great dark splotch against the
horizon, with its torch of flame,
came out before them. The tall
shadows they were finding, were
some kind of growth, just what they
were not sure. Palms, they reasoned ;
but the fire? It was beyond them.
The joy that came with the thought
of once more resting their feet on
any part of dear old Mother Earth,
(Continued on page 15.)
A GREATER NATION THRU A
GREATER SOUTH.
(Continued from page 5.)
The Southern Medical Association
will be represented by its President.
Dr Oscar Dowling, of Louisiana, and
Secretary, Dr. Seale Harris, A'abama.
The Texas Farm Life Commission
will participate in the convention,
through its President, Judge S. A.
I indsay, of Tyler who will deliver
an address on Agricultural Day.
The Treasury Department, the De
partment of Commerce, the Depart
ment of Agriculture and the Depart
ment of Labor will be represented on
the program by these respective Cabi
net officials. Special bureaus to be
represented are Bureau of Foreign
and Domestic Commerce, by Dr. E. E.
Pratt; Farm Demonstration, by Dr.
Bradford Knapp; Office of Markets
and Rural Organization, by Charles
J. Brand; Foreign Trade Advisors,
by Robert F. Rose: Public Health, by
Surgeon J. H. White; Weather Bu
reau by C. F. Marvin. Addresses
wil 1 also be delivered by Hon. W. P.
G. Harding, representing the Federal
Reserve Board, and Hon. Joseph E.
Davies, representing the Federal
Trade Commission.
The Departments of Agriculture of
the following States will be repre
sented: Texas, Virginia, West Vir
ginia, Louisiana, South Carolina, Ar
kansas, North Carolina. Alabama and
Mississippi.
The Departments of Immigration of
the following states will be repre
sented: Texas, Louisiana and Okla
homa.
The following railroads wi’l be rep
resented by their industrial commis
sioners and agricultural commission
ers and agricultural agents: South-
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The Woman’s Auxiliary of The
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hold its sessions coincident with the
convention of The Southern Commer
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