The Covington news. (Covington, Ga.) 1908-current, October 20, 1915, Page PAGE TWENTY, Image 20
PAGE TWENTY (Emtingtott Nftua PUBLISHED EVERY WEDNESDAY Official Organ of Newton County and of the City of Covington FRANK REAGAN, Editor and Publisher. A. S. ADAMS, Superintendent. .COVINGTON, GEORGIA, OCTOBER 20, 1915. . ROLL CALL OF EXTREMISTS ' We are called extremists. The big daily papers of Geor¬ gia so term the W. C. T. U., the Anti-Saloon League leaders, and all who favor or are fighting the radical prohibition meas¬ ures passed by the Georgia Senate last summer. In so naming us, you do distinguish us and place us in the hall of fame along with the immortals of all times. History and biography do not give the least space or at¬ tention to any deeds but the extreme deeds nor to any persons but extremists Every war was waged by extremists, and yet most na¬ tions have reached their highest destiny only through such conflicts. The physician does something very extreme when he lit¬ erally pours other poisons into the stomach of the man who has already taken poison, to counteract tjie effect of the lat¬ ter which would otherwise be fatal. It is an extreme measure resorted to when a person’s limb is amputated, but the amputation saves the patient’s life and the results justify the measure Sometimes very desperate steps have to be taken by men of medicine in their efforts to save life; even whole organs of the body may have to be removed. Desperate illness demands desperate remedies. When the body’s blood has long been poisoned and been constantly conveying its poisons to every nook and corner of the body, the latter can never be healed and have the poison eradicated without suffering much pain for a time. The body may grow thin, the face become pail, and the muscles weak, but it is all for the body’s ultimate good. It is doubtless true that, when the whiskey has perme¬ ated our whole body politic and deposited its poisonous salts into all the body’s joints and made them rheumatic, and poisoned the life stream flowing through the arteries of al¬ most every calling—the eradication of this evil may make the body politic temporarily appear more diseased than w T hen the poison flowed freely on its way unimpeded. This, how¬ ever, is but the pain produced by the antidote which must be administered. But when the last traces of the poison have been driven out, the body has blood bounding with life buoyant and ab¬ undant far beyond anything ever known in the whiskey days. And history is filled with illustrations of this truth, and the history now in the making is daily adding volumes to such illustrations. Vodka vanishes from Russia and a new Russia arises and is aroused to the self-consciousness of her greatness and her possibilities. Absinthe absents itself from Paris very reluctantly and the world awakes to see a nation, supposed to be the most gay and fickle, show' itself the most stable and reliable And a law forbidding public treating reduces the liquor traffic in Britain. Why do not these newspapers which oppose prohibition place this question on the same plane with the question of the suppression of the traffic in opium, cocaine, and other dead¬ ly habit-forming drugs? There is but one answer; it is because there is no ques¬ tion of the suppression of the traffic in the drugs. There is no disagreement about that This much is admitted by even the most rabid hater of prohibition, and the prohibitionist is in complete accord with him in these respects: 1. That cocaine, opium and such substances enslave their pitiful victims and often degrade them to the level of beasts. 2. That the habitual use of intoxicating liquors so en¬ slaves its victims that they too are often degraded to the level of beasts. 3. That the victims of drink so far outnumber the drug victims that the difference is almost beyond the power of fig¬ ures to compute or the power of the imagination to fancy. Allowing that a few of the very worst cases of the drug victims may present a more revolting spectacle than the worst cases of the drink victims, when the victim’s mere per¬ sonal appearance and the effect of his habits on him alone is considered. 4. That the extreme legislation which has been enacted against the sale of narcotics and opiates was proper and should be rigidly enforced. We take it for granted that the daily newspapers approve this law for the reason that we have found nothing to the contrary in their columns. Only this far will the fighters against prohibition go with us. But, to the unprejudiced reasoner, as plainly as night follows the day, just so surely and inescapably follows: 5. Extreme legislation suppressing the traffic in intox¬ icating liquors is proper and is demanded by the conditions Here is the chain of reasoning in a nut shell: 1. “Dope’’ is a terrible evil; 2, Drink is an even more deadly evil: 3, Destroy “Dope”; 4, Destroy Drink. How strange, you ask, that even those opposing prohib¬ ition will take the first three steps with us and refuse to go all the way and to take the fourth and most severely logical step. There is a reason why “Dope” has no friends and the friends of Drink are legion; the number who indulge in drink is almost infinitely greater than the number who are “Dope fiends.” This greater number of consumers demands a great¬ er number of dispensers to supply them. And such a great THE COVINGTON NEWS, WEDNESDAY, OCTOBER 20, 1915. number of producers- and dealers consequently wield a great¬ er influence in an effort to create or combat a public opinion. Such numbers represent much money and political pow r er, but the latter is rapidly waning and:the former is not so rap inly increasing as it once was. • Attack the vilest evil in existence, and, if that evil is the stock in trade of any large number of people, you will have a desperate fight on your hands before you conquer it. And those who oppose you will shout that they too des¬ pise the evil but fight for “the- principle.” We extremists admit that “we like our company,” to quote the words of one of the daily liquor advocates about its friends among those professing to be prohibitionists We would here mention a few of .the extremists who stalk like giants through the pages of Holy Writ: OUR SAVIOR HIMSELF; from the standpoint of the world, who ever uttered a more extreme saying than this: “Destroy this temple and in three days I will raise it up.” —John 2: 19. ABRAHAM; to his son Isaac, when God had commanded Abraham to offer Isaac as a sacrifice: “My son, God will provide himself a lamb for a burnt offering ”—Genesis 22: 8. DAVID; when a mere child, to Goliah, the giant: “This day will the Lord deliver thee into mine hand; and I will smite thee and take thine head from thee; and I will give the carcasses of the host of the Philistines this day unto the fowls of the air, and to the wild beasts of the earth.”— I Samuel, 17: 46. ISAIAH; thq seer, of grand imagery and sublime ideas, accounts for his power of eloquent prophecy by telling that a seraphim, bearing in his hand a live coal from off the altar, flew to Isaiah. ‘And he laid it upon my mouth, and said, Lo, this hath touched thy lips, and thine iniquity is taken away, and thy sin is purged. - ’—Isaiah 6:7. JOB: “And, though, after my skin, worms destroy this body, yet in my flesh 1 shall God.”—Job 19:26. PAUL: ... -t “I take pleasure in infirmities, in reproaches, in necces sities, in persecutions, in distress for Christ’s sake; for when I am weak then I am strong.”—II Corinthians 12:10 SOLOMON: “Wine is a mocker, strong drink is raging; and whosoever is decievved thereby is not wise.”—Proverbs 20:1. And secular history is filled with the work of extremist*: Newton, building the theory of the laws of gravitation from observing the fall of an apple. The foolish young man Franklin, flying a kite to catch the lightning from the skies We remember w'hen we ourselves thought with the world of Marconi as a harmless but useless visionary. And now the very winds waft wireless words over the world in tribute to him for his service. Pity the person whose principle and whose practice do not so possess him that he is willing to pursue it’s consummation to the utmost extreme. State Senator John D. Walker so says. He says he is sure that the majority of the people of Georgia want the Gen¬ eral Assembly in the coming extra session in November to pass the most drastic prohibition measures. Further on in his - card published in a Sunday paper he says he thinks these new and drastic prohibition measures should be passed with a proviso submitting them to a vote of the people for ratification. What for? What does he desire to learn from such a vote that does not already know? He who sincerely and genuinely wants a thing wants it right now- If he wants it, why should he wish to wait for it until the people tell him whether they want it? For our part, if every other man in our community desir¬ ed to carry a pistol, we would be just as anxious for a law to prevent his doing so as if every man wanted such a law. We want intoxicants of every character kept from people just as strongly, whether a majority of people desire it or want to banish it. If we can secure our wishes for its banish¬ ment without a vote by all the people, we want it in that way. The very men, so-called prohibitionists, who want a vote of the people, all say they believe the majority vote would favor prohibition. Then why do they seek the vote? The only reason they give is, that, when the p^4c^>^e j^^pstain a law, there will be a better respect for th : ^’ law andenforcement of the law When did these people come to have such a solicitous con¬ cern for the enforcement of the law ? The very papers which voice such expressions have themselves been parties to the violation of the spirit of the law 7 at least, in carrying in their columns whiskey advertisements, inviting Georgia people to buy whiskey of non-resident concerns to be shipped into Georgia. There can be but two sides to this question. The most ingenious and side-stepping politician cannot find any middle ground. A man is either for or against whiskey. If he is against the stuff, he wants to see it eliminated everywhere, and the very taste for it lost; he who does not wish to see it disappear altogether, but would regulate the traffic in it, must, .still have'either or both some regard or taste for it; and so he cannot be a prohibitionist but belongs to the beer band and is loyal to liquor. Then there is he who says that he would keep liquor but would abolish the saloon. Why does he want to keep it ? There can be but one use, for .somebody to drink it. And, as long as great quantities of liquor are consumed, the saloons or substi¬ tutes will be the places where the greatest portion of it is con¬ sumed The student of the situation cannot escape the truth that the very stuff itself degrades and debauches to its low! level everthing it touches. °*n Men engage in the business of dealing in it and i they may never drink a drop of it, they th ° Ugl1 ’ soon come to ’ 'n parta ^ of of its its nature, nature, misbranding. misbranding, adulterating adulterating, cheating . i ke bribing if possible to their bold, n yt^\ character if such secure in inconsiderate of lfe ° are their way to block their PU1 r ' break their power. In its very death agony in Charleston it used violen murder in the vain effort to perpetuate its power. i(eancl l In Chicago it makes threats against those who mt see that it no nonger shall defy the state statutes. ^ to Its every touch is tainting. ___i The liquor power knows practical politics, i t know. many voters would stay away from the polls in a prohibV election the same as in any other election. It knows m ] its crowds will be sure to vote its full force, and its mon vote others. ..... - v ’’^ many . And, if it but reflects, it also knows that, no mutter ’ > the would vote be would a result, long time there would ripening. be evil eff orts whose bitten!*!^ f r T Personal would be engenderd, families possibly estranged, and aroused never yet which been the election years might this only intensify; for thZ'T'* an on question which did n ' i 1,1 duee these fruits. DELAY THE DAY OF WRATH' Prohibitionist Senator Walker also says that the laws to be enacted should new not go into effect for several months, so the brewers and dealers may prepare for thnir going into effect. UI This cannot but mean, so that they may have that much longer to make and sell their concoction. This means he same thing as to say to the man who has his gun drawn on the burglar, until he can gu through latter also has in hand: your a gun “Delay shooting the burglar, until he can go through your house and see what he wants, or maybe he can shoot Don’t have little regard for you. so him at to shoot him. He’s human just like you.” Ilere s an institution daily destroying character and lives and homes and all values, robbing us of things of such high value that a mere burglar of the ordinary kind has no use for them, robbing an infinitely more valuable home, the temple and abiding place of the Holy Spirit himself; with his gun ready to slay the very keeper of the house himself, the hu¬ man brain; and there steps to his lawless side a lawmaker himself, pleading that we allow this outlaw to shoot or rob this one more house before we destroy him. The Macon Telegraph says that it is untrue that the in¬ vestment in these breweries, etc., represents an illegal bus¬ iness, that the state by its law 7 recognized them in providing a tax for them. i he state has never legalized a single brewery now op¬ erating in Georgia by laying a tax on it since the enactment of the present prohibition laws. The State provided a tax on “near beer.” The Telegraph knows the prohibition act intended to prevent the manufac tuie and sale of any beverage whose use would intoxicate, and taxing “near beer’ was taxing a drink which was not an in¬ toxicant. There is now no such thing as “near beer” and nobody makes it. At first, when the general prohibition law was passed, these breweries were never dismantled or ceased long to opeiate. For a brief time they weakened their beer in a pi (Tended compliance with the law, and beer drinkers were not satisfied w r ith the resulting drink. So the out-of-the-State breweries began to stock the jh ai beei saloons with real beer, and “near beer” ceased to be, and Georgia breweries faced the alternative of being loiced to quit or meet the oiff-of-Georgia competition by de lying the lav. and making real beer. They did the latter and returned to their old business so briefly interrupted by be¬ ing merely outlawed. So that now all, those made in our state and elesevvhere, aie sc much alike that some established brands have to dis¬ tinguish theirs in advertising it by calling attention to its colored bottles. Outlaws are never warned by the officers when they in ‘ in to raid them and their rendezvous. Neither may the ^lawless breweries, etc., expet to be given any days of grace. HERE it is. A1manv ‘‘ays and nights of la, ’ or - OUr Foiiveiition Edition is out. "e shall not offer apologies for its ■’aolts, though it is not what ««■ wool 1 oke to ha\e it 1: " ! ' ve enjoyed tin- work of I it lulling for il. Vn-.l a ’letsoii never laid more inspiring co-workers than tlie noble women with whom we have toiled in this enterprise. It leads us to the conclusion that even toil most exacting and involving tlie most severe strain becomes a pleas¬ ure when the toil is in some worthy cause which we allow to take pos¬ session of our very selves, excluding everything less worthy and so elevat¬ ing tis to rare heights. Rut that this edition has as many good features as it 1ms and that they are made to present as attractive ap¬ pearance as they do is due to tlie men who have worked in tlie office early and late to this end. There is Mr. Adams, tlie Superinten¬ dent. who knows tin* art of making tilings look pretty in print and of do¬ ing many other tilings. There is no sham about his make-ups. And Mr Wellborn’s is “the hand (hat keeps (he world informed,' at tlie Linotype machine. The vast amount of matter was set by him on the machine. And Mr. Ningquefleld has French ia his name, but says lie is neutral. I* 11 ' press has been feeding out of his hour after hour. No finer team ever pinyul the g- ia)e played it better, and our H,ll ' er or owe them a great debt. And grateful also to a * we are ,l1 contributors and advertisers " . generously aided in pioduiing paper. METIIOuIST WEEK NOVEMBER OF pR * U ^“ WILL BE • Week of prayer will b<‘ Methodist church o» • * the „ the 7th to the 13th, at » afternoon. d help aid All are furtherance requested t0 of “V-hrisf* the tg!s dom in Japan and among on our western shores. “(Jo ye into all the w°i 1 • the gospel to every 11,1 16:15.