Newspaper Page Text
9,361 BOOZE CASES
WERE BOOND OVER
ATLANTA POLICE MAKES REPORT
ON ACTIVITIES OF POLICE
DURING 1920
STATE OF INTEREST
Brief News Items Gathered Here And
There From All Sections Os
The State
Atlanta. —During the month of De
cember, 1920. 4. r ,2 arrests for making
and selling li<|uor were made by the
Atlanta police department, according
to a report received by Major James
A. Fort, federal prohibition director,
fryin Chief of Police James I. Heav
ers. The report also shows that. 9,361
personsw ere hound over to higher
courts by the recorder for violating
the prohibition laws during the year
1920.
The monthly letter of Major Fort to
sheriffs, chief of police and county
policemen for January indicates that
conditions are getting more favorable
for enforcement of prohibition lawH
during 1921.“ A report showing the
activities of federal and state officials
is mailed each month to arresting of
ficers, and Major Fort states that it
w ill be sent to any other person on re
quest.
The Junuary letter Is as follows:
To Sheriff’s, Chiefs of Police and
County Policemen: With the begin
ning of the new year conditions seem
more favoralile for the enforcement
of prohibition laws.
A mimbVr of ne wmen have assumed
their duties as officials with a full
knowledge of conditions ns they exist
in their counties, and what steps will
be necessary to take to improve these
conditions.
1920 was a political year, a year of
high prices and a time of reaction,
following the war. All of this made
the enforcement of prohibition laws
more difficult.
As many pressing issues of last year
have been settled, the newspapers will
turn to other matters for their news,
and it may be reasonable to expect
that a great deal of publicity will be
given to the enforcement of prohibi
tion laws. Whore had conditions are
brought to the public notice, Improve
ment should folllow now as It has In
the pusl.
, Tlxw letters and reports nre for
the purpose of establishing cordial-re
lations between state and federul of
ficials, of keeping such Informed of
the activities of ihe other in an effort
to co-ordinate the supplement—not
to supplant the duly constituted state,
and municipal officials.
You nre cordially Invited to visit
or communicate with this office at
any time.
Yours very truly,
James L. Fort,
Federal Prohibition Director.
i
■ arnesvllle Bank Enjoyed Fine Year.
Barnoßville. —The First Nutionnl
Bank at Bartlesville held its annual
Stockholders’ meeting, and the reports
made by the officers proved to be a
remarkable showing for the past
year's business. The surplus account
was Increased by f 30.000, making its
surplus now SBO,OOO, with a capital of
$90,000 and an undivided profits ac
count of $17,t00. A dvlidend of 12
per cent was paid stockholders.
officers und directors were re-elected
for another year as follows: W. B.
Smith, president; R. A. Stafford, vice
president; L. C. Tyrus, cashier, F. B.
Sims and 11. A. Peacock, assistant
cashiers; the other directors being T.
J Berry, B. H. Hardy. J. \V. Garland,
W. H. Mitchell, L. O. Benton.
$473,000 Deficit Faced By Schools
Atlunta. —With estimated needs of
the school department. $173,000 in ex
cess of its anticipated income of sl,-
186,000 for this year, a serious prob
lem was presented to the finance
committee of council. The only re
trenchment policy possible, that of
reducing the teachers' salaries to par
tially meet the deficit, was promptly
frowned upon by the majority of the
committee, and it seems more than •
likely that the .schools will have to
travel through the year carrying a
large shortage. At the end of 1920
the hooks of the school department
showed a deficit of $lll,OOO, chiefly
brought about through the necessity
for a series of extraordinary und un
foreseen expenditures. The rebuild- i
ing of Milton avenue school, which
wus destroyed by fire early in the j
year, was one. Krectton of annexes at
other schools to provide for overflow
oondttions wt*ro others.
4,941 Increase In Macon Negroes
Washington. D. C. —The negro pop
ulation of Macon, Ga„ was announc
ed by the census bureau as 23.091. an
increase Os 4.941. or 27.2 per cent. The
white population is 29.900. an increase
of 7,390 or 32.8 per cent, and all oth
ers, 4.
Negroes Attempt To Derail Train
Dublin. —Three negro boys, Clar
ence Freeman. 13. Herschel Lawton,
17 years old, and Jerry Lee. 14, are
in jail here on a charge of attempting
to wreck the Wrightsville' and Ten
nille passenger train, near Brewton,
Laurens county. The engineer saw a
pile of bars on the track as he near
ed the 31-mile post and endeavored
to stop, hut could not do so. Before he
reached the obstruction, however, the
speed had been slowed down to the
extent that no damage was done and
wreck was averted
To Organize Guild For Healing
Atlanta. —Seeking to establish
among the clergy of the Episcopal
church and the people generally a
I guild for the healing of the sick,
| Rev. Henry B. Wilson of Boonton,
N. J.. held a conference recently with
Bishop H. J. Mikell, Dean Thomas H.
Johnson and other prominent Episco
pal clergymen. Mr. Wilson is the di
rector of the- Society of the N'azarene,
and his visit to Atlanta is a part of
a tour of many Southern cities in
which he will wage an educational
j campaign with reference to divine heal
-1 Ing. The conference was held at the
rector of St. Philip's cathedral, and
It is understood that the plan for re
viving the practice of healing the sick
through the instrumentality of the
Christian clergy met instant favor
among the local Episcopal clergymen,
and It is believed that efforts will
be made at once to form guilds to
carry on the work. The membership
in the Society of the Nazarene is not
confined solely to the Episcopal con
gregation, nor to the ministry, but
is open to all.
Lowest Interest Rates For Homes
Atlanta.—That Atlanta and Milwau
kee are the two leading large cities
in the country in which money may j
he borrowed at six per cent on the
general market to build houses; and
| that money is "more available now
! than it was three to six months ago,” j
| was developed at the open forum !
meeting of the executive committee of
the National Association of Real Es
tate boards, which was held at a lo- !
cal hotel. The meeting was presided j
over by Charles L. Simpson of Kan
sas City, a former president of the
national association. Representatives
of sixty-two cities were present, and
they responded to a series of ques
tionsp ut lip by Mr. Simpson.
Unwritten Law Upheld By Jury
Savannah. —The coroner’s jury in
vestigating the killing of John A. Mc-
Cann, secretary and treasurer of the j
Georgia Federation of Labor, and also
prominent in local labor and political
circles for several years, returned a
verdict of "justifiable homicide” and j
freed John P. Stnarr, a Central of
Georgia railway engineer, who shot
McCann down in the Smarr apart
ments after discovering McCann in
the room of his wife. It is not like
ly that there will be further action,
Bince the decisive result of the coro
ner’s investigation.
Arrest Is Made In Race Trouble
Gainesville. —A lull in the inter-ra
cial trouble which has run rife in the
northern portions of Hall county
came as a result of the arrest of
J. S. Black, aged 22, who was appre
hended and landed in the jail here at
the instance of Gov. Hugh M. Wor
sey. Sheriff Will Crow of Hall coun
ty stated that he will leave the city for j
northern parts of the county, where j
he will effect one other arrest of a ;
party alleged to be responsible for
some of the recent trouble. "We do
not need any military because we
are going to break this thing up our
selves.”
Prisoners Arrive For Bunco Probo
Atlanta. —Three of the six men, ar
rested by the Memphis police in a re
cent hotel raid and believed to be im
plicated in the swindling syndicate
that operated in Atlanta were brought
to the tower recently, following an ex
citing experience encountered when
they spirited the prisoners away from
the Tennessee city to avoid service
of habeas corpus papers to prevent
the extradition.
7 Illicit Distilleries Are Destroyed
Columbus. —The destruction of sev
en illicit stills, four of extraordinary
capacity, and the confiscatio not S.OOO
gallons of beermash, resulted from
raids made by county officers and
deputy sheriffs of Muscogee county.
Five of these outfits were located
loss than a mile apart, a short dis- j
tance from the Harris county line, j
No arrests were made.
Man Drops Dead In Store
Atlanta.—A man believed to be R.
E. Burge, dropped dead in a grocery
store after ordering groceries. He
reeled and fell as the clerk was giv
ing him his order. The body was
| identified by Ed Thompson,, proprie
tor of the Postol hotel, as that of R.
E. Burge, who was formerly employed
as night clerk at the hostelry. A let- ;
ter in one of the man’s pockets bore j
the name and address of R. E. Burge,
S 3 Edgowood avenue. Atlanta. Ga., it j
is stated. The body was removed to :
an undertaker's for burial.
Man Kicked By Mule In Bad Shape
Milledgeville.—Arthur Butts, a lo- i
cal merchant, is in a critical condition
ns the result of face and h aediujuries ,
inflicted by a mule. Mr. Butts heard
some disturbance around his house,
and. getting out of bed. he went out
to investigate. I'pon his return his
wife asked him some questions. Re
ceiving no coherent answer, she dis
covered her husband in a practically
unconscious state, and bleeding front
, his nose and ears, with a bad wound
on his face.
Bank Robbed Os $25,000 In Bonds
Pembroke. The National Bank oi
Pembroke was robbed of about twen
■ ty-five thousand dollars worth of lib
; ! erty bonds, taken from the safety de
posit boxes. The burglars entered the
. I bank by a rear door, obtaining the
i bonds, but could not get into the vault.
which contained nearly one hundred
1 thousand dollars worth of cash and
> notes. After taking the bonds the
• thieves "jimmied” their way out by
■ the front door, and it is believed that
1 they made their escape by means of
t a handcar bn the railroad
THE MONTGOMERY MONITOR. MT. VERNON, GEORGIA.
MEXIC REVOLUTION
| PLOT DISCLOSED
LETTERS DISCLOSING AGUILAR
PLOT SENT TO PRESIDENT
OBREGON
AGUILAR TRYING TO GET ARMY
Commander Alleged To Have Agreed
To Join In Revolt Under
Arrest
El Paso, Texas. —Gen. Francisco
Marguia (commander of the northern
zone og Mexico, under the Carranza
regimei has taken the field in oppo
sition to the government of Obregon:
Official dispatches to Consul General
de Oca, in El Paso, tell of a battle
between the Murgula forces and those
of the government in the state of
San Luis Potosi.
The rebel general fled, pursued by
federal troops after eight of his men
had been killed and a number wound
ed, according to the reports.
Vera Cruz, Mexico. —Definite pro
gram for a new revolution in Mexico,
to be headed by General Candido
Aguilar, son-in-law of the late pres
ident, Caranza, is disclosed in letters
forwarded to President Obregon by
the general commanding this zone.
The confiscated letters beg officers
at Vera Cruz to join Aguilar at a
certain place on a date already fixed
“to aid him in overthrowing the Obre
gon government.”
Aguilar is now on the Guatemalan
frontier, trying to form an army with
which to enter Mexico. He has
agents working in Puebla, it has
been established, as well as other
Mexican towns.
Several cases of implements of war
and machinery for making bombs were
discovered in the hold of the steam
ship Floraba, which arrived here re
cently from New Orleans. They were
consigned to revolutionists in this city
and were turned over to the military
authorities.
Information received here from
Puebla is that the commanding gen
eral in that city, with all his offi
cers, is under arrest, and that docu
ments found on the men provefl they
were communicating with Aguilar, and
had promised to go over to him.
JAPANESE GOVERNMENT
SEND FULL STORY OF
W. H. LANGDON’S DEATH
Washington. Admiral Albert
Gleaves, commander of the Asiatic
fleet, has abandoned his intention of
proceeding to Vladivostok to conduct
an inquiry into the killing of Lieut.
W. H. Langdon, U. S. N., by a Jap
anese sentry, he notified the navy de
partment.
Lieutenant Langdon of the American
cruiser Albany was shot by a Japan
ese sentry at Vladivostok when he
failed to understand or heed a com
mand to halt, said an official ver
sion of incident received by the
Japanese., embassy from its govern
ment.
Lieutenant Langdon, the message
said, had drawn a revolver after the
sentry had puled back a hood that
covered his face in an effort to de
termine whether he was a Russian
or an American, but did not fire until
after the sentry had shot him after
the officer had turned to walk away.
Another message to the embassy
said the Japanese government and
people were greatly concerned over
tlie incident and that both the min
ister of war at Tokio and the Japan
ese commandant at Valdivostok had
expressed regret to the commander of
the Albany, of which Lieutenant Lang
don was chief engineer.
Code O-K’d For Nation's Highways
Washington.—lndorsement by nine
teen national organizations of a com
prehensive code of principles for reg
ulation of highway traffic has been
announced here. The anouncement
came at the conclusion of a confer
ence called tQ consider the question
of securing greater uniformity in
state and municipal traffic laws. Rec
ommending the establishment in ev
ery state of a definite agency for ad
ministration of traffic laws, the con
ference advocated that such agency
be empowered within "proper limita
tions to refuse, suspend or revoke all
registrations and operators’ licneses.
Future Exchanges Warmly Defended
Washington—The grain trade can
get along without the present market
ing system, provided congress is
ready to place the American farmer
on a plane with the Russian people
and the Argentine farmer, L. F. Gates,
former president of the Chicago board
of trade, declared before the house
agricultural committee, which is con
sidering bills to regulate future ex
changes. The system makes for a
wide liiurket. increases the return to
producer#; and prevents a monopoly,
he asserted.
Businesslike Sales For Shipping Board
Washington.—ln commenting on re
ports that the shipping board is con
templating a reduction in the price of
government merchant vessels. Chair
man Benson declared recently that
the board Las taken the position that
the ships will be disposed of in an
orderly and businesslike manner in
accordance with the provisions of the
new shipping act. The act provides,
he explained, for the ultimate turn
ing over of the government-owned
merchant marine to private owner
shiD consistent with sound business.
'AERONAUTS HAVE FIST FIGHT
I Older Man Resents Slur On Stamln<
Contained In Letter Written By
Hinton To His Wife
Washington. —Brief and cryptic was
1 the story told in an oficial reporl
filed by Lieut. Louis Kloor, comman
ding officer of the balloon on his ar
rival at Mattice. It was received
r by the navy department and made
public as follows:
“Secretary United States Navy De
1 partment, Washington, D. C.: Report
free balloon A-5598, flown under my
command, passengers Lieutenants Far
rell and Hinton from naval air sta
, tion, Rockaway, December 13. En
countered storm which forced duration
flight. Aband (garbled) stormy sea,
landing impossible for safety crew,
forced land December 14 in forest ap
proximately 20 miles northeast Moose
Factory, James Bay, Ontario, Canada,
Reached Moose Factory safely De
cember 17. Subsisted and transfer
red this place Hudson Bay company.
Proceed January 12 naval air station
Rockaway.”
Mattice, Ontario.—The long trek to
civilization of the three American na
val balloonists came to a dramatic
climax here when two of them —Lieu-
tenants Farrell and Hinton —came to
blows over statements alleged to have
been made by the latter in a letter
to his wife.
When they emerged from the bush
at 2:20 o’clock after a sixteen day
journey from the Hudson Bay com
pany post at Moose Factory, near
which they descended, December 14,
the three areonauts, bound in a tie
of friendship through their facing to
gether of death, apparently were in
separable.
An hour later, Lieutenant Farrell
sat in the parlor of the log cabin
home of H. P. Williamson, clerk in
the Hudson Bay company store here,
relating the story of the party’s ad
ventures to newspaper men.
During the conversation Lieutenant
Farrell was shown copies of news dis
patches, among them a letter alleged
to have been sent by Hinton to his
wife, and published in a New York
newspaper, which said, in part:
“Mr. Farrell fell from exhaustion
several times. Wanted us to cut his
throat and take his body for food
and asked us to go on and let him
die, but we decided to stick and die
together. I was the only one that did
not express my feelings and kept them
cheered up.”
Hintcgi then came into the room.
He told Farrell he should not con
tinue his talk to newspaper men, as
he had dispatches from the secretary
of the navy forbidding any of them
to talk until an official report had
been filed.
“You rat, you have bedn talking
yourself,” Farrell snapped back, in
dignantly. He then accused Hinton
of writing false reports, referring to
the letter.
Hinton replied that the letter had
been published without his consent,
but that its contents evidently had
been exaggerated. Farrell then went
into another room to apologize to
Mrs. Williamson for his language.
While he was gone, it is said Hin
ton declared his remark about his ex
aggeration was made only for Far
rell's benefit.
Farrell returned. More words pass
ed between the officers. Then Far
rell took off his coat and struck Hin
ton on the jaw. Hinton was sent
sprawling over a table. At this junc
ture newspaper men and others in
the room stepped between the men.
The men left the cabin separately
and went to a special train waiting
on a siding to take them to Coch
rane.
Claiming that he had been “double
cross” in regard to the writing of
letters for publication, Farrell said:
"I wrote a letter to Frank Bent,
commissioner of contracts of New
Y'ork City, and he (Hinton) asked
me to write on it that it was not to
be published.”
He added that Bent was an Inti
mate friend, and evidently had done
as requested.
Heavy Loss In Rice; Warehouse Burns
Crowley, La. —Che Planters’ Ware
house containing twenty-five thousand
bags of rice, was destroyed by fire,
the loss being approximately two hun
dred and fifty thousand dollars, par
tially covered by insurance. Origin of
the fire, which was discovered short
ly after midnight, recently, so far has
not been determined. The warehouse,
a corrugated iron structure, was val
; ued at twenty-five thousand dollars.
Modification Asked In Union Pact
Chicago.—Change in operating con
ditions from those wrich prevailed
during government operation of the
railroads is ascribed as one of the
reasons the railroads are asking the
railway labor board for modification
of the national agreements with the
railway labor unions. The reason is
■ assigned by John G. Walker, whe
said the rail representatives present
. when the agreements were negotiated
i were chosen as subordinates of the
regional directors and were not entire
ly free to negotiate.
I Cotton Futures Amendment Urged
Washington.—Amendment of the
- United States cotton futures act to in
[ elude American-Egyptian cotton in the
- grades tenderable on contract. was
; urged before the house agricultura
t committee by K. M. Turner, treasurei
i of the Pacific cotton exchange at Los
i ! Angeles. This legislation, he said
* would afford the American-Egyptiai
I interests the same protection for theii
business as is enjoyed by other cot
ton interests. At present, He said
the American Egyptian cotton dealers
have to do business in England.
11. S. RESTRICTIONS
ON RUSS TRADE
RELATIONS BETWEEN UNITED
STATES AND RUSSIANS
DEFINED
DENIES OBSTRUCTING RELIEF
Charges That United States Elocks
Trade With Russia Are
Refuted
New York. —Details of the United
States policy toward Soviet Russia,
given by Acting Secretary of State
Davis in a letter to Alton B. Parker,
president of the National Civic Fed
eration, were made public here re
cently.
Mr. Davis discussed at length ques
tions widely published prior to the
last election and addressed to the
presidential candidates. These ques
tions were submitted to the secretary
of state by Mr. Parker in November
in a letter asking for light on the
department’s attitude.
The United States government has
no intention of “officially restoring”
the former boundaries of the Russian
empire, nor to impose on any non-
Russian territories the rule of the
great Russias, Mr. Davis explaiend,
characterizing as false a statement
that this government proposes offi
cially to restore Russian territorial in
tegrity and rule over Lithuania, Letvia
and Esthonia.
Mr. Davis’ letter said, in part: “Rus
sia is in a condition of distress, and
there is grave danger on all her fron
tiers of aggression either directly by
foreign states or' indirectly through j
the control of these border states. In I
several of these struggling border ter
ritories there is a difference of opin
ion as to which group has a right to
speak for the ‘nationality’ involved.
“It is the conviction of this gov
ernment that these thorny questions
cannot now be solved in an ex parte
manner. The Russian people are cer
tainly interested in such decisions and
consistent with its previous action the
department of state in a note of Au
gust 10 again served notice that it
could not be considered as indorsing
territorial settlements affecting tha
welfare of the Russian people unless
a government generally recognized as
representing them were a party to the
adjustment.”
AMERICAN LINERS, WITH
OUT CHEERING LIQUORS,
GO UNPATRONIZED NOW
Washington.—American passenger
steamship officials, appealing to the
house judiciary committee for modi- 1
fication of the Volstead act, frankly j
declared they would be unable to com
pete with ships of foreign registry
for the trade of the world unless
permitted to handle liquors for use i
by patrons beyond the three mile
limit.
About the only consolation they ob
tained at the end of an all-day hear
ing was a prediction —not for The Rec
ord —by Representative Dyer (Rep.)
of Missouri that “they didn’t have
a chance.” This comment was made
in open session, after the general coun
sel for the Anti-Saloon league, in op
posing any let-down in the present
law, expressed the opinion that some
day the world would be dry and that
the ships of all nations would sail
the seven seas without a drop of li
quor aboard.
No Vote Reached On The Nitrate Bill
Washington.—Further delay in
reaching a vote in the senate on the
bill for federal operation of the ni
trate plant at Muscle Shoals. Ala., was
offset in part by the bill's advocates
in repulsing an attempt to shut it j
aside. The bill became tangled with
an effort to rush through the resolu
tion of Senator New, Republican, In
diana, to reduce the regular army, to
one hundred and seventy-five thou
sand men.
Labor Federation Told To Dissolve
Paris.—Dissolution of the General
Federation of Labor was ordered by
the court which has been hearing the
case against Leon Jouhaux, president
of the federation, and other of its
officers, on charges of infringements
of the law governing unions. Fines
of 100 francs each were imposed upon
Jauhaux and four other federation of- j
ficials.
Public Affairs Fill Harding’s Life
Marion. Ohio. —Withh is conference
here nearing a conclusion. President
elect Harding devoted a day to dis- j
cussion of a long list of incidental
public questions. The day’s confer- j
ences revealed no development in re- |
gard to cabinet appointments nor any
of the other important problems await
in* solution. Speculation here re- j
garding the cabinet now centers on
whether Charles E. Hughes of New
York is willing to accept the post of
secretary of state.
Taken From Jail, Miner Is Lynched
' Jasper, Ala. —William Beard a min
er held in connection with the killing j
. of James Morris, a guardsman, on De-
I cember 23. last year, was taken from
• the Walker county jail here by a mob
s I and later shot to death three miles
. from Jasper on the Manchester road,
i Leslie West, proprietor of a garage
• at Holly Grove, near Townely, this
- j county, was arrested in connection
, I with the slaying of Beard. He was
; I placed in jail. Officers stated that
I thev exDected to make other arrests
I MEL HORROR '
|' TOLD BE DODSON
You Don’t Need to Sicken, Gripe
or Salivate Yourself to
Start Liver.
You’re bilious, sluggish, constipated.
You feel headachy, your stomach may
be sour, your breath bad, your skin
sallow and you believe you need vile,
dangerous calomel to start liver and
bowels.
Here’s my guarantee! Ask your drug
gist for a bottle of Dodson’s Liver
Tone and take a spoonful tonight. If it
doesn’t start your liver and straighten
you right up better than calomel and
without griping or making you sick I
want you to go back to the store and
get your money.
Take calomel today and tomorrow
you will feel weak and sick and nau
seated. Don’t lose a day. Take a
spoonful of harmless, vegetable Dod
son’s Liver Tone tonight and wake up
feeling splendid. It is perfectly harm
less, so give it to your children any
time. It can’t salivate. —Adv.
Naturally.
“Do you think an engagement ring
makes a girl more thought of by her
1 chums?”
“Well, it is a good thing for a girl
to have on hand.”
DANDERINE
Stops Hair Coming Out;
Thickens, Beautifies.
A few cents buys “Danderine.” Af
ter a few applications you cannot find
a fallen hair or any dandruff, besides
every hair shows new life, vigor, bright
ness, more color and abundance. —Adv.
The heart of a flirt resembles a
| crowded street car—there is always
room for one more.
ASPIRIN
Name “Bayer” on Genuine
Warning! Unless you see the name
“Bayer” on package or on tablets you
are not getting genuine Aspirin pre
: scribed by physicians for twenty-one
years and proved safe by millions.
Take Aspirin only as told in the Bayer
package for Colds, Headache, Neural
gia, Rheumatism, Earache, Toothache,
Lumbago and for Pain. Handy tin
boxes of twelve Bayer Tablets of As
pirin cost few cents. Druggists also
sell larger packages. Aspirin is the
trade mark of Bayer Manufacture of
Monoaceticacidester of Salicycacid.—
Adv.
Christianity lays its great stress on
each man reforming himself. Imper
; isliable idea, that.
THE BEST YET.
If you have never used Vacher-Balm,
you don’t know how quickly and pleas
antly a cold in the i)e ad > or soreness
anywhere can be relieved by this harm
less remedy.
Ask your druggist or send for a free
sample, to E. W. Vacher, inc„ New Or
i leans, La.
Avoid imitations. Nothing is “just
as good.”—Adv.
A man has readied the limit of self
i importance when he is satisfied with
his own society.
Cuticura Soothes Itching Scalp
On retiring gently rub spots of dan
druff and itching with Cuticura Oint
ment. Next morning shampoo with
Cuticura Soap and hot water. Make
i them your every-day toilet preparations
and have a "dear skin and soft, white
hands. —Adv.
No man is as bad as some other man
thinks he is or as good as some woman
thinks he is.
It is better so be beaten in trying
to do right than it is to succeed in
doing wrong.