The Henry County weekly. (McDonough, GA.) 18??-1934, February 19, 1915, Image 2
THC brsry County Weekly FRANK fU'UUAN, Krtiior Sntv-r iliit *stnflor.- 4 t MMVmo >t>n Oa., as sooond-c.ass mail matter. Advertising Rates furnished on Mupli sation. Official Organ of Henry County. MOn vi T;i, G i., Feb. 19, 1015 Life Resents South’s Methods. Here is what “Life,” a magazine “said to be funny” inflicts upon its readers, under the heading, “The Inferiority of the Negro:” “Our friends down South, being sure that the negroes are inferior, deny them advantages and pro vide inferior schools for negro children in order that they will continue to be inferior and thus prove the correctness of the con tention of the scientists and sen timentalists that the negro is infe rior. After all, there is nothing quite so satisfying as the feeling that you have got things fixed so that you will always have an infe rior race in your midst.” We appreciate Life’s considera tioninsending us a copy ofitsmag azine with the above article mark ed. Otherwise we would not have had knowledge that any public writer in our country is still living in the dark ages which the whole North passed through just after our War Between the States, an age of extravagant south-haters and negrophiles. That was an age of a virulert epidemic of hate and prejudice more fatal to the finer feelings than cholera is to the body. And here comes a writer who displays in his make-up a violent recrudoscense of this leprosy of the soul. The immediate cause of such a malady is always either a mental mal-nutrition of the food of facts found every wiiere about the suf ferer or an anaemia of the soul due to its lack of energy in par taking of tiie proteids of fact easi ly available and the consequent poverty of the blood. Had this malady attacked Life a r ’ew decades ago, it might have )een fatal, but now it need not be 50 at all. We have learned now how to treat and cure it. So successful has the method of treatment been that we re lily believed that this scourge had been entirely wiped out never again to appear. Out of abundant precaution the health authorities nyav see fit to isolate this case until future devel opments may determine the wisest way to handle the case. We do not think such a course necessary, however. We believe that a few hypodermic injections of information will preserve Life and even make it wholesome. The only problem now is how medical attention may be provided for the sufferer. You see, it has not yet been a complete genera tion since this scourge was doing its most deadly work in preaching to the negro “Forty acres and a mule,” all to be taken fro n the Souttiern white man, and political rule over the white man by his former slave. So that even the medical world still retains its feel ing of horror at the very thought of a return of this in Uady, though it in iy be in the shape of a single, very mild case. I.i the days of its greatest dan ger this leprosy had to be treated by the severe application of a se cret formula known only to a new school of medicine which originat ed it, the Ku Kiux school. But this schooi passed out when the necessity which brought it in- to being existed no longer, and its ! secrets died with it. l ucre is only one hope we can see. As the negro learned much from tins sctiool of in ‘diciue when it was at its best, he may know something yet of the treatin nt. We could readily spare some of our colored brethren of the medi cal profession and suggest that Life cail one or more to treat his fearful case. This will enable him to study the negro also and maybe confirm tins editor in the belief he hints at that the negro is not his infer ior. This issue of Life was sent to newspap' rs throughout the S outh, with the article quoted by us marked. We thiuK we under stand the motive with which it was sent. Life’s editor expected and hoped that many of these news papers would dignify his fling with some editorial notice and he would thereby reap much free advertising. He is entitled to all the adver tising which comes to him from what we have said above. We may dven h ive som ‘thing more to say on the subject, but this is enough for this week. Unsigned Communications. Newspapers have peen conduct ed for a long time, and for the same length of time have the edi tors been reminding contri butors that unsigned communi cations will not be published. Many busy editors announce that they will not even read annonymous comm unicat ions. But still newspapers almost dai ly continue to receivesuch letters. Recently several of our corre spondents have sent unsigned news letters. This week an 1 1 ist there were several such. One managed to he published only be cause it was accompanied by a letter which was signed. Even then, however, we ourselves wrote the contributor’s name at me bot tom of 4 he news letter. We cannot publish unsign 'd letters. It is not sufficent that the name he on envelope. It must be signed to the news article. Pine Apple. Danilee Turner, of Griffin, visite 1 relatives in this vicinity a few days last week. . Mrs. T. W Price and little Mis - Florence visited it this place Sat urday. Mr. and M-s. C. C. lister visit ed Mr. and Mrs. W. W. Norton Saturday night. Mrs. .J, F Lester visited Mrs. T. J. Morris near McDonough Thurs day. • Mr. J. M. Lester and familv visited the families of Messrs. W. H. Fargason and Frank Cake? Sunday. Mr. David Wall visited Macon Sunday. Prof. Grey will demonstrate the Weber Wagon on the square Sat urday at 11 a. m. and 2 p. rr. Come and see him draw a load with his teeth. S aid by Smith &■ Amis. McDonough, Ga. Adv. Mis Mirv Birker, of Atlanta, was the week-end guest of Mrs. Annie M Nolan. Miss A nie Lmnon, of A rues Scott Co’ege, was at home for the week-end. Her host of friends rejoice to heir tli t she is taking a very high stand in her studies. Mr. Lo ns S nith, of M icon, was in our city Sunday. MR. DOZIER FIELDS WRITES FINE ES’AY. “Christmas; Its Origins and Cus toms" Was Published in Athens Daily Herald. The following article was taken from the Athens Daily Herald and was written by Mr. Dozier Fields, a son of Mr J. F. M. Fields, of this city, and now a student at the University of Georgia. He is also a graduate of the Mc- Donough High School and his manv friends here and in the coun t will enjoy reading the excellent essay: CHRISTMAS; ITS ORIGIN AND CUSTOMS. The origin of Christians is a subject as interesting as it is ob scure; its customs and their ori gins whi e better known and un derstood are none the less very interesting. j The exact date of the oirth of Christ is not known definitely; it is placed by different authorities variously in tie- months of April, May, June and October of the year 48. C. Clearly the day of n :ivi ty, which we now celebrate an December 25, was not in ifee ‘ru ber, for during that in >nth t.,e rainy se is >a in Judea is at its height t 1 shepherds would hard ly have been watching their flocks by night in the plains at such a time. The observation of Christ’s birih began sometime during the fourth or fifth century, the wes tern church begin liig the cali bration. About the year 340 A- D. Sulius directed St. Cyril to look into th ■ q iesti*» i of the S iviour’s, v birth and h*, after investigation, reported th it the western church observe iit on December 25, a date which seemed most logical to him. Our observance of Cnrist nus exten Is back to this but in order to see how the month of December came to he selected as the proper time to celebrate the corning of Christ into the world, let us lo >k back over the festivi ties which were held long before the nativity. Pagan nations looked upon the season of winter with awe, for then it was that nature began her activities ane v, and whmi tne days began to shorten they ,v. re seized with a fear that the nun was dying. And so when the days co u n meed to lengthen and the sm t > linger for a longer time on theearte > acii day they made ii a time f r re joicing, and this peroid natu diy fell somewhere about the 25m oi December. The Germans, who believed that between December 25 and Jan. 6 they could trace the person- al movements on earth of their deities Odin and Berchta, celebra ted at tueir mid-winter solstice the return of the fiery sun-wheel with a feast which they called the Yule feast. The Saturnalia of the Ro mans which was a time of merry making for them, a kind of har vesting home, took place about the same time; the Roman streets a ere ihronJed with people at that time, enjoying themselves at sanies and exchanging gifts. Yule tide was also a season of festivals and rej >icing among the Scandi navian§ani Britons an i s> it is easy to see ho v Christia lity took over tnese ce! 'orations and trans formea them into a com neinora tion of oar Lord’s birth. From the D -a is c tines the cus tom or decora ing with mistletoe at *Jlinst n is. fn yyJhelJ a special reverence for tins small plant, p u ticLilarlv when they ton id 11 growing o 1 ous, an 1 it was then custom to a t ig it over i 1 *ir dooi daring the wi iter in )nttis as a sign of welcome to the gods ot the, forest. At the end of the old year they' gathered it and present ed it as a special offering to Jupi ter. Holly, which tradition tells us was the bush in which God first appeared t.> Moses, owes its use for decorative purposes to these same Druids. The superstition, if such it may be called, with regard to kissing beneath the mistletoe, points back to an interesting bit of Scandi navian mythology. Loki, it is said bore a deadly hate for the Baluer. the Apollo of the North, Tut he had no apparent means of re venge, for everything which sprang from earth, Try o'~ air wa; pledged not to harm Baidm. At last however, Loki hit un a plan of having an arrow made from the mistle'oe v hit u hid been deemed too insigniiicanl l > be pledged to allegiance. With this arrow he ind iced the blin i Hoiur to shoot his enemy with the re sult that Bilder was instantly ku 1 ed. He was, however, restor'd to life at the requ. st or the gods and the mist'etoe was given into the keeping oi the goddess or' where ever)one who parsed be neath it kissed it to Glow that it was not a sign of dtatn hut of 1 we. iS u ‘a Ciaus, win • » we regard as an institution r uner th m as a custom, has been traced back to | St. Nicholas,the Bishop of Myra, as the originator. Tin's good man was extremely fond of children and later, under the name of St. Nicholas, came to oe regarded as their patron saint. Many are the stories told of him but the one which seems to bear the most re lation to the customs of hanging up stockings runs as follows: The Bishop being desirous of helping, secretly an old man whom he knew to be in need, decided to go to the man’s home at Christmas tide and dr >p several coins down the chimney. The coins, instead of falling on the htarth as he ex pected, fell into a stocking which was hanging by the fire to dry The money was used, is is said, as a dowry for the eldest daughter, MAKING THE SCHOOLHOUSE THE SOCIAL CENTER ' V ii 1 " L -- a-' , • -- - » The sclioolhouse shown in the above cut and built by the Milstead Manu facturing Company, near Conyers, Ga., for the benefit of their employees, is an interesting example of progress in the practical education of children and also of the idea expressed in the phrase, “Making the Sclioolhouse the Social Center.” This school has four class rooms, a library, a room for the cooking class, a boys’ workshop and an auditorium seating 300, arranged for lectures, theat ricals, motion pictures, etc. The building is modern in design and arrange ment and has modern plumbing, heating, ventilating, lighting and fire pro tection systems. The cost, including tiie equipment and furnishings, was SIO,OOO. It is interesting to note that in connection with this srhool there is a garden tract provided, which is subdivided into individual plots for the boys and girls and is irrigated from a tank cn the sclioolhouse roof. It is proposed to give practical and scientific instruction in the planting, growth and care of garden products and to stimulate interest in the same by prizes for the most successful gardens. The pupils, of course, ketp the products grown on their own plots. The p an of inccrp:raring an auditorium in the school building for the pleasure ar.d profit u! the whole community, is an idea that may be of va ua to many small towns. In such an auditorium the local deflating society may Uo:d its public debates; the amateur theatrical club give i's dramatic produc tions; Christmas and other holiday celebrations may be he d therein, and it is available for lectures and po itical addresses A moving picture program may be inaugurated ouce a week or oftener and, with proper supervision in respect to the selection ol subjects, should prove of educational va’ue as well as of relaxation and entertainment In these views one may see wonderful sights the world over, beautiful places of nature and the triumphs of art and invention. One may see far away cities and countries and their people at work and at play. The mind is broadened and quicken* d by sigiit3 which only travel could otherwise supply. Wh> shou d not most country towns enjoy equal advantages with mill wn and provide a sclioolhouse where the children may have modern 00l tacilities, a place also where ihe entire ne.gaborhood may meet mutual en*<urment aud improvement? and thereafter whenever a d iu jit ter of the housi vis t) b; nir ried St. Nicholas alw ivs placed a gift in the stocking for her. Another custo n of interest to us all is the singing of carols at Christmas Tiie word c irol is in all probability derived from the Latin Cantare and Hm Rola? an r*xci itnaf of joy. *la tin* < rly d ivs Pie his , ios followed out r us practice Glim, uy the wa'., is is old as Christmas itseh, a.i.i ilg carols to the ciwgy. In Fra.ice carols are sung more than in America; Mnre tlv-y are called No 1. or Christ songs. An allus ion is made by M : .i >o in his “Para dise Lod” to probably the first Christmas carol. “His [) ,i ;e ot birth a solemn an gel tells To simple shenh erds, keeping vat :ii by night; Tn-yr’ad’ thither haste, and by - tyr.ro Of sqaiiroi’d angels hear His carol sung.” Dining the sixteenth century the carola bngau to ate on polish uadi no.v they for n some of the most oeautiful md sacr - i poetrv w hive. Li an extract fro n one otlldieck’s poems we find an ideal illustration of this kind of verse, which perhaps more than any other practice celebrates in v the true spirit the nativity of Christ: ‘Tell us, thou clear and heavenly tongue, Where is the Babe that lately sprung? Lies he th*- lilv-bamcs among? Or say if mis new Birih of cur’s Sleeps, laid within some ark of flowers, Sprangled with dew light; thou canst clear All doubt and manifest the where. Declare to us bright star if we sjiall seek Him in the morning’s blushing cheek, Or search the beds of spices Through To fit d Him out.” A Convalescent requires a food tonic that will rapidly build no wasted tissue SsssSk containing Hypophosphites is a most reliable prescription which we always recommend for that purpose. Mein/; HUGH lIHUU < OMJ ANY.