Newspaper Page Text
l’HE ATLANTA SEMI-WEEKLY JOURNAL, ATLANTA, GA., TUESDAY, MARCH 4, 1913.
5
ROYAL
BAKING POWDER
Absolutely Pure
The only Baking Powder made
from Royal Grape Cream of Tartar
no alUm. no lime phosphate
! /OUAITRY
»H° me
COMOCTED BY.MRS. X7 H.TE.LTD/1.
TIMELY
TOPICS
MAKING BUTTONS AND MAKING
' . DRESSES.
I desired very much to get some
dress buttons and the assortment was
small in my town, but the lady who
w*»s doing the work for me said: “Just
send a scrap to Mr. Blank’s store and
lie will have all you want made and
it will only cost you 15 cents per
dozen."
And the buttons are just as nice as
you could ask, and, of course, , will
match beautifully when they are con
trived from the same goods. I have
been more or less acquainted with but
ton molds ever since I can remember,
and I have bought buttons by the
dozen arid by the gross, but this new
invetnion where you "send a scrap"
and 15 cents and are returned a dozen
lovely made buttons, certairily “takes
the cake," to adopt a little slang.
I do think* every young wdman
should be taught to make her own
dresses, plain ones at least, and I do
not understand why she cannot adven
ture with “tailor made" after she is
carefully instructed and can get fancy
buttons so easily prepared for adorn
ment.
I never shall be prouder in my whole
life than I was at twelve years of age,
and I could make myself a gingham
dress that my dear mother kindly
praised me for doing so nicely. I took
a long step forward ,and I have made
hundreds since that time, I suppose,
big and little. I took on that time a
feeling of independence that has lasted
m e for. nearly three-quarters of a cen
tury.
OUR UNPRAISED BLESSINGS.
1 have been reading about Chaldea
in the Holy Land, and historians tell
us it was a stoneless country. They
imported stone at immense cost and
labor. They used clay to make tablets,
and worked in clay as the Egyptians
worked in stone, for portrait, sculpture
and other monumental sculpture. They
learned to bake this clay successfully
and also learned to enamel. Their" chief
buildings were covered with enameled
bricks. The Assyrians borrowed their
arts and sciences from the ancient Chal
deans. As I read of this stoneless land
and remembered 'the bountifulness of
our stone supply. I wondered if we ev.er
thought of what we could ever do in
this heaven-blessed America, without
any of our building stone. There are
numberless places where nothing .but
stone-heavy masonry would answer. Yet
we have never expressed any especial
gratitude for our bountiful supply of
this great factor in massive architec
ture and commercial progress.
When we can and do revel, in an
abundant supply of fresh, clean, pure
water, we do not stop to pity the peo
ple who must count the barrels and tax
time and strength to get enough to
drink and to keep stock alive. With wa
ter in abundance we have one of the
chief blessings of human comfort, and
disease-prevention.
How many of us ever stop, when we
hold a glass of fresh, sparkling water,
to thank the Great Father who con
trived this wonderful agent for our
pleasure and profit?
It is always a marvel and*a mystery
this life-giving agent, this every-dav
plentiful water that we use in some
way every waking hour of our lives,
and yet we would quickly die if we could
not slake our thirst.
tti the Corcoran Art gallery, in Wash
ington is a notable oil painting called
"The Drouth in Egypt." To my mind
it had most fascinating interest. The
groups that were starving for water
had a hopeless agony stamped on every
face, from the dead babe to- the old
men and women who surely faced a
coming death. Think what would hap
pen to us if the springs and fountains
went dry! Shall we not hereafter make
a business of thanking God, as the
chickens do, when they take a drink of
water?
OUR PERNICIOUS NAVAL SYSTEM.
Have 3 r oti read Congressmai Trib
ble's expose of our way of conducting
our naval affairs and of the floods of
money that are being appropriated to,
keep on in this same old bungling and
extravagant way?
It is simply a monstrosity!
Mr. Tribble said-on the floor of the
house: “In 1896 when we went into
conflict with the Spanish government
we appropriated eight millions of dol
lars for the pay of officers and men. At
the present time (with no war) we have
appropriated thirty-nine millions of dol
lars for the pay of officers and men. We
appropriate nearly as much today, as
we did for all the naval expenses, in
cluding the building of six new battle
ships in the year 1899.
“Gentlemen you will be surprised to
know wo have spent ten millions on
Pearl island, and the gentlemen from
Texas says he does not know where
Pearl Island is.
"Now the Democrats have come in, we
are asked to appropriate twelve mil
lions more, for various things on that
island. There is a hundred thousand dol
lars for a water front. $30,000 for an
other proposition, and $65,000 for anoth
er and $24,000 for officers’ homes. We
had already spent $63,000 for officers’
homes over there, $117,00 for officers,
homes on that distant island.
There are $50,000 for tropedo
shiqs, $100,000 for, a marine railway,
$100,000 for a dry dock on an island
where a Texas congresman says . he
don’t know where it is.
“This bill caries an appropriation of
$150,000,000. Can you blame me, as a
member of the naval committee for com
ing in here, and crying out, and crying
out loud against such gross extrava
gance?”
This is but a single quotation an dthe
bill passed and that infamy was fast
ened on us! I am glad there were two
Georgians who protested.
WOMAN TO SIT IN
DEMOCRATIC COUNCIL
LOS ANGELES, Cal., March 1.—Miss
Mary Foy, of Pasadena, today is on the
way to Washington, where she will be
the first woman to attend a national
party committee meeting. As proxy for
State Senator Sanford, she will occupy
the seat allotted to California in the
council of the Democratic national com
mittee and will be California’s sole rep
resentative.
When Senator John B. Sanford, of
Mendocino county, found that he could
not attend the council, he nominated
Miss Foy as California’s delegate and
she was promptly accepted by other
Democrats.
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President Woodrow Wilson is the
master of an uncommonly clear style
in writing and speaking:. The clarity of
his style grows out of the clearness
of his thinking; and he thinks clearly on
moral and religious matters as well as
upon economic and political subjects.'
Recently he was reported as saying
the following wise words about turning
churches into places of entertainment
instead of holding them as houses of
worship designed for the achievement
of spiritual ends:
"When we say that the way lo
get young people to the church is
to make the church interesting, I
am afraid that we too often mean
i that the way to do it is to make it
entertaining. Did you ever know
the theater to be a successful means
of governing conduct? Did you
ever know thfe most excellent con
cert or series of concerts to be the
means of revolutionizing a life?
Did you ever know any amount of
entertainment to go farther than
bold for the hour that it lasted?
If you mean to draw young people
by entertainment with something
that is not entertaining, but which
grips the heart like the touch of a
hand. I dare-say there is some ex
cuse for alluring persons to a place
where good will be done them,
but I think it would be a great deal
better to simply let them under
stand that the church is a place
where life is dispensed, and if they
want life, they must come to that
place,"
This is a most timely utterance,
which both preachers and people will
do well to lay to heart. There is a
rather general impression abroad that
the pulpit of today spqaks with less
authority than did the pulpit of the
past, and that the churches have lost
power over men. If this impression is
justified by the facts in the case, we
need not go further than the wide
spread disposition to use the churches
lor purposes of entertainment to find
an explanation of the diminished in
fluence of the preachers and the Chris
tian organization. When the pulpit
enters the field .of entertainment and
bids fbr the patronage of amusement-
loving people, it can not speak with
authority, but it must speak to please;
and a world-pleasing preacher or church
can never exert spiritual influence over
men. On the contrary such a church
or pulpit is treated querulously and
whimsically by its pleasure-seeking
patrons, who will neither dance when
it pipes nor mourn when it laments.
The command of the Lord to the apos
tles was, “Go, stand and speak in the
temple to the people all the words of
this LIFE;” and this is the will of
God concerning the men in all ages who
claim to be ambassadors of Christ. The
pulpit is no place for merely enter
taining lectures and addresses;—no,
not even for worthy and elevating dis
courses on literary, scientific or social
questions. ‘However useful and proper
such discussicffi may be at other times
and places, they are utterly out of place
in the church of God upon the day set
apart for worshiping our heavenly
Father and drawing religious refresh
ment from the fountain of spiritual
life. The gospel of Christ by its very
nature does not admit of treatment for
ends of entertainment; it is too solemn
and serious for such uses. To undertake
to amuse or divert with the gospel of
a crucified Redeemer is to do some
thing worse than committing a blun
der;—it amounts almost, if not quite, to
a profanity.
Eyen men of the world feel that a
church is to be censured which seeks
to gain the patronage of the world by
playing the part of a purveyor of
amusements. When the church ceases
to speak with authority and begins to
court* the favor of men rather than
to call them to repentance, it loses the
respect of all sensible people and pro
vokes their derision.
The comic periodical called “JUDGE"
can not set up a just claim to a religious
character, but recently that paper satir
ized the amusement-making church in
the following piece of broad and bitter
ridicule:
THE CHURCH AND THE NEAR
FUTURE.
The Rev. E. Lycurgus Gabb will
preach Sunday morning, at 10:30, on
the topic, “The Progress of the
War on Tuberculosis.” His evening
topic will be “The Best Seller in
Recent Fiction." The topic of the
weekly prayer-meeting will be "Pe
ter the Great,” illustrated by fine
moving pictures. There will also be
a moving-picture show in the church
on Monday evening.
On Tuesday evening the Athletic
Association of the Church will have
a prize drill and a contest for a
silver cup, in which the young men
of a sister Church will take part.
A good time is expected.
On Wednesday evening there will
be an interesting and exciting bas
ketball contest in the gym of the
church, followed by a supper, to be
paid for by the losing team.
On Thursday evening two teams
will each try to do the other lip in
a bowling contest, which promises
to* pack the bowling alley of the
church to the limit. After the con
test, some of the experts in the
swimming line will do some fancy
swimming stunts in the church
swimming pool.
On Friday evening the young peo
ple of the church will, have a rag
tag and bob-tail social, which prom
ises to be a very hilarious affair.
A prize will be given to the person
attending in th^ most ridiculous
costume.
On Saturday night there will be
a baked-bean supper, to be followed
by a pleasing entertainment.
It is in this way that the Church
is opening its doors every day in
the week and seeking to create
Christian character among its ad
herents. Let the good work go on.
Some may regard it as highly im
proper to transfer this bit of coarse
derision of the churches from the pages
of “Judge" to this column, and may
consider blameworthy any seeming ap
proval it by copying it. But the
very extravagance of the thing may
serve as a warning against a prevalent
tendency in the church which has gone
already to disgusting and dangerous
lengths.
Recently the press dispatches re
ported the case of a church in Chicago
which had opened “a dance hall in the
parish house to compete with the vi
cious institutions of this character that
comprise such a problem in Chicago.”
This church which has gone into the
dance-hall business was described in
the secular press as “a most fashion
able church", whatever that may mean.
To apply the word “fashionable" to a
church smacks of a spirit, however,
that one might expect to manifest itself
in routs and balls; but it suggests noth
ing akin to the spirit of the church
whose birth and growth are recorded
in the Acts of the Apostles.
If* such a question be not too profane
for Christian people to frame, let us
ask how it would look in the pages of
the Acts if we read there the state
ment that Paul opened a dance hall in
the city of Corinth *to „ compete with
the “vicious institutions” which made
the moral problems of that dissolute
commercial metropolis which flourished
and festered in the first century?
But the great Apostles to the Gen
tiles can not be conceived of as a
how can a church hope to escape degen
eration when it undertakes to compete
with the play-house or the dance-hall?
The proposition is as senseless as it is
sinful.
The one business, and the exclusive,
business of the church is to produce and
promote spiritual life among jnen, to
make converts and edify believers. • It
has wandered from its work when it
undertakes to engage in the business of
diverting people. It can not without
discrediting itself beg the world for its
patronage, and it never dishonors itself
more than when it offers men a premi
um of an amusement in order to get
them to subscribe to its support. Our
Lord is reproached when his church
offers to give a theater-ticket or dance-
! hall privileges to any one who will
I accept them. O the shame of so much
j as thinking of such a wretched pro
posal!
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3<X\.0cY&-cv/ * a* - if-2. 5^7.
Recipes and Suggestions Tested and
Found Good by Homekeeping Experts
preacher resorting to such degraded
and degrading methods to catch the
patronage of a lost world. He has left
us a. description of the means upon
which he relied to redeem Corinth from
its foul sins. In his first Epistle to
the Corinthians he says, “And I .breth
ren, when I came to you, came not with,
excellency of speech, or of wisdom, de
claring unto you the testimony of
<Ickl. .For I determined not to know
anything among you, save Jesus Christ
and Him crucified. And my speech and
my preaching were not with enticing
words of wisdom, but In demonstra
tion of tlie Spirit and of power. That
your faith should not stand in the wis
dom of men, but in the power of Fod.”
(I Corinthians 11:1-2, 4 and 5.) What
would a inan with a programme and
purpose of that sort think of a proposal
that he should enter the field of com
petition with alluring dance-halls?
The truth is the church of God can
not hope to compete with worldly insti-
tutioiis in offering such attractions. If
one undertakes the business of amusing
people, be must prepare to change the
play-bills often, and with each change
he must make the next bill a little
more sensational than the last, until at
last he roaches a point at which he
dare not go further in that direction and
can not go backward. It is then his
patrons turn away from him, and go
elsewhere to seek some new thing. The
theater exists under this irresistible
law of degeneration, and this fact ‘ex
plains the oft-repeabed cry, “Let us re
form the theater.” The vain proposal
has'been made again and again for more
than a thousand years. In every age
of its history all men have agreed that
the theater should be reformed, but no
body has ever been able to reform it.
Like mortal man, "it never is, but al
ways will be blessed.”
But if the theater, operating the busi
ness of amusing people, can not with
stand the inevitable gravitation to evil,
HUSBAND
TIRED OF SEEING
HER SUFFER
Procured Lydia E. Pinkham’s
' Vegetable Compound,
which made His Wife
a Well Woman.
Middletown, Pa. —“I had headache,
backache and such awful bearing down
pains that I could not be on my feet at
times and I had organic inflammation so
badly that I was not able to do my work.
I could not get a good meal for my hus
band and one child. My neighbors said
they thought my suffering was terrible.
“ My husband got tired of seeing me
suffer and one night went to the drug
store and got me a bottle of Lydia E.
Pinkham’s Vegetable Compound and
told me I must take it. I can’t tell you
all I suffered and I can’t tell you all that
your medicine has done for me. I was
greatly benefited from the first and it
has made me a Well woman. I can do
all my housework and even helped some
of my friends as well. I think it is a
wonderful help to all suffering women.
I have got several to take it after see
ing what it has done for me.”—Mrs.
Emma Espenshade, 219 East Main St,
Middletown, Pa. i
The Pinkham record is a proud and hon
orable one. It is a record of constant
victory over the obstinate ills of woman
—ills that deal out despair. It is an es
tablished fact that Lydia E. Pinkham’s
Vegetable Compound has restored
health to thousands of such sufferin
women. Why don’t you try it
need such a medicine?
If you want special advice write to
Lydia E. Pinkham Medicine Co. (conii-
dential) Lynn, Mass. Tour letter will
he opened, read and answered by a
woman anil held in strict confidence.
iffering.
Wi
Stork and Cupid
Cunning plotters
Many a New Home will Have a Little
Sunbeam to Brighten it.
There is usually a certain degree of dread
In every woman’s mijpd as to the probable
pain, distress and danger of child-birth.
But, thanks to a most remarkable remedy
known as Mother’s Friend, all fear is ban
ished and the period is one of unbounded,
joyful anticipation.
Mother’s Friend is used externally. It
Is a most penetrating application, makes
the muscles of the stomach and abdomen
pliant so they expand easily and naturally
without pain, without distress and with
none of that peculiar nausea, nervousness
and other symptoms that tend to weaken
the prospective mother. Thus Cupid and
the stork are held up to veneration: they
are rated as cunning plotters to herald the
coming of a little sunbeam to gladden the
hearts and brighten the homes of a host of
happy families.
Tfifere are thousands of women who have
used Mother’s Friend, and thus know from
experience that it is one of our greatest
contributions to healthy, happy mother
hood. It is sold by all druggists at $1.00
per bottle, and is especially recommended
as a preventive of caking breasts and all
other such distresses.
Write to Bradfield Regulator Co., 131
Lamar Bldg., Atlanta, Ga., for their very
valuable book to expectant mothers. Get
a. bottle of Mother’s Friend to-da.v.
Price of Coal Goes
Up Three Times More
Than Wage Increase
WASHINGTON, March 1.—Hard coal
companies increased the wages of their
employes at the rate of $4,000,000 a
year by the strike agreement of last
May and increased the price of anthra
cite to consumers $13,450,000, accord
ing to a report based on an investiga
tion by the bureau of labor submitted
to the bouse today.
The report submitted by Secretary
Nagel is the result of an investigation
conducted in response to a house res
olution asking for the "elements of
cost and profit included in the present
high price of anthracite.”
An average increase of 2G cents a
ton, in wholesale coal prices was dis
covered to have been made since the
strike agreement of last May. In
spite of the fact that the workers ben
efited about $4,000,000, in increased
wages in the year, the report adds that
‘The recent increases in prices have
been more than sufficient than to com
pensate fully those companies whose
ciists of production have increased
more rapidly during recent >*ears and
at the same time, have very greatly
increased the profits of those compa
nies, of whom there are at least sev
eral whose costs of production either
decreased or 'remained stationary durin
the same perid."
Of the-more than $13,000,000 gained
by the operators after the strike agree
ment, $10,900,000 was derived from gen
eral increase in prices and about $2,-
550/000 from the suspension of April
and May discounts while, in addition,
a limited number of operators are re
ported to have “recovered large sums
through the sale of coal at premiums
made possible by the shortage of ship
ments,” incident to the strike.
- The discounts of 40 and 50 cents a
ton customarily allowed in April and
May on domestic size coal were sus
pended during those months in 1912.
As a result the operators not only
gained by saving this discount, says
the report, but in addition purchasers
who were unable to get their usual
supply in those months were forced to
buy it during June, July or August
when discount rates were smaller or in
September and later when full circular
prices are charged. The $13,450,000,
the report says, was not net profit
because out of it came the cost of the
six weeks’ cessation of work by the
strikers and also the increase in their
wages. •
The increase in wages however, the
report adds, represents a raise of only
eight to ten cents a ton in the cost of
coal production. , %
FITE MAKES REPLY TO
HILL_AND GOVERNOR
Says That It Is Amusing as
They Do Not Reply and Are
“Yet Replying Still"
CALHOUN, Ga., Feb. 27.—When ap
proached with regard to the published
replies of Governor Browri and Judge
Ben Hill to his remarks regarding them,
Judge A. W. Fite, after a few minutes
deliberation lias made the following
statement:
“The reply of Governor Brown and
Judge Hill to my remarks to the grand
jury is amusing in that they will not
reply anil are ‘yet replying still.’ The
governor is an amicable little gentleman
and I said nothing derogatory of him. I
am of the opinion from my conversation
with him that, if the officials, whose
duty it is to suppress the oqen and no
torious violations of our prohibition laws,
and who, seemingly, arc unable to do so,
would call upon the'governor that he
would do his duty and if necessary, Call
out the militia and suppress them.
“I am glad that Judge Hill pleads
‘guilty,’ and am sorry that he pleads
‘not guilty,’ but this is not strange, for
‘they all do it.’ Everybody knows that
all locker clubs sell liquor; and every
lawyer knows that every locker club
that sells liquor is a blind tiger, and that
every member of a locker club that sells
liquor is a blind tiger.
"Judge Hill’s statement that I was re
versed in three cases recently is about
his size. Why, the court of appeals re
cently reversed themselves once and me
twice in the same case, but the negro is
now in the penitentiary in spite of them,
on his own confession of guilt in open
court.
"Some one has said that ‘the judge
who is reversed the most is the one who
does the most and stands closest to the
people.’ The technical judge is a men
ace to the proper administration of the
law, and the law should be amended so
as to provide that no case should be re
versed where no hurtful error of law has
been committed and substantial justice
has been done.” i
Judge Fite said that if the law would
give him authority he would himself call
the governor’s attention to violations oc
curring outside his own circuit.
, FOR THE HOME COOK.
Cream Puffs.—Most people think
cream puffs “impossible," but they are
really quite simple. I have found this
method a very good one:
Boil together one cup of water, onc-
lialf cup of butter. While boiling, add
onc-lialf cup of flour. Stir until
smooth, then cool and add three eggs,
well beaten. Stir smooth and drop on
butter pans by tablespoonful. Bake
twenty-five minutes. You will be sur
prised at the way they puff up.
Cream for filling: Rub together one-
half cup of sugar, two teaspoonfuls
of flour. Stir slowly into one-liaif cup
of boiling milk, add one egg. well
beaten; flavor with vanilla. When cold,
cut the puffs open and fill with the
cream. It’s fine.—Mrs. E. H.
Chocolate Cream Pie.—This is a very
gciod recipe:
Yolks of three eggs, one-half cup of
sugar, five tablespoonfuls grated choco
late (unsweetened), one cup of milk,
one pinch of salt, one teaspoonful of
vanilla, one tablespoonful of cornstarch,
Cook -until it thickens, stirring con
stantly.
Beat the whites of three eggs, add
two tablespoonfuls confectioner’s sugar;
put this meringue over top of custard
and put in oven to brown. It tastes
line.—Mrs. Ida Jones.
Jelly Roll Cake.—Everybody likes
my jelly roll. I take one cup granulated
sugar and three eggs (separate and
beat the whites), add yolks of eggsrto
sugar and stir until as thick as cream;
three $ tablespoonfuls milk or water,
one cup flour, two teaspoonfuls baking
powder. Put together and beat well.
Last, fold in tli.e beaten whites of eggs
and flavor to taste.
Bake in square pan. When done,
spread \ with any kind of good jelly,
AhiVe cake is still warm, and roll.—
Mrs. Hess.
Doughnuts.—I have ftfund this a very-
good recipe for doughnuts: digestible
and Inexpensive:
Two eggs, one cup sugar, one cup
hot mashed potato, butter size of wal
nut, three and a half cups flour, one-
half cup sweet milk, two teaspoonfuls
baking powder, one-half grated nutmeg.
—Mrs. R. E. Sperry.
TIFT COUNTY TO HOLD
EDUCATIONAL DAY
Event Under Auspices of the
Twentieth Century Literary
Club ii4 Celebration
(Special Dispatch to The Journal.)
TIFTON. Ga., March 1.—Annual edu
cational day in Tift county originated
by the Twentieth Century Library club,
has growit to bo an institution of im
portance. For the celebration this year
on March 14, the preparations are more
clabbratc than ever before, for In ad
dition to the usual entertainments in
honor of the school teachers of the coun
ty. Governor-elect Slaton aru* Mrs. Sla
ton, Mrs. Fitzpatrick, president of the
Georgia Federation of Women’s clubs;
Mrs. II. II. Merry, presTtsenv of the Fed
erated Women’s clubs of the Second dis
trict, and others from ubroaw be
guests.
There will be an afternoon reception
for the guests at the home of Mrs.
Nicholas Peterson, vice president of the
State Federation, and in the evening
Governor-elect Slaton will deliver an
address in the auditorium!
The teachers of the county will be
entertained by the members of the local
club in their homes. In addition to tne
regular program, there will be sight
seeing motor tours through the county
over the splendid system of roads now
being completed.
>A Human Match Factory*
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bones, flesh, nervous system and other organs. The perfect health of bocjy
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TIFTON TO OBSERVE
“CLEANING UP” DAY
TIFTON, Ga., March 1.—Georgia’s
annual "clean up day,” according to
pronouncement of the state federation
of women’s clubs, March 10, will be
a great occasion in Tifton. The Twen
tieth Century Library club of this
city has so decreed, and that goes.
Moreover the decree has the approval
of Chief of Police Thrasher, who . is
also health officer, and this means a
stiff fine against the occupant of any
abode which does not pass rigid in
spection on or before the appointed
day. Tifton has long enjoyed the
reputation of being the cleanest un
paved city in Georgia, and this must
be maintained, say the ladies.
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TREE IS PLANTED
BY GRANTVILLE SCHOOL
GRANTVILLE, Ga., Feb. 28.—At 10
o’clock Thursday morning, the tenth
grade of the Grantville high school plant
ed its class tree on the spacious campus.
It is a water oak, and was named James
Oglethorpe, after the founder of Georgia.
The interesting and instructive pro
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