Twice-a-week telegraph. (Macon, Ga.) 1899-19??, February 15, 1907, Image 8

Below is the OCR text representation for this newspapers page.

8 THE TWICE-A-WEEK TELEGRAPH FRIDAY, FEBRUARY 1«. WHERE HAVE ALL THE LOVELY WOMEN GONE? Wbat has become of ihe dignified, j imagines that Mrs. D.ish. who of a few I jus: across the street and is " ,• crowning glory, her j lair, added so inneh : ■livery-haired grande datr meet _ does not know her years ago. wt beautiful whit. nair. ao.,.-.. ■• • i - when, in fa ;, hot',, wear dved her distinguished apear.ii.e. i n *' '!“ j Ka, h hurries t.. her little private ; i. conspicuous future m . I* _| j n mv parlors in a panic lest tiie < places, and. indeed. wh-r oe. . £e( , h " ( . r com( . And If three were gathered tog*- Is r. ana iirr , shining white nair gave of distinction winch tin- crown gives to the head of royalty. Sometimes she wore the imperious expression of Catherine 1 h .M.-dc i and a carefully built pompad utr which ac cented the pride expressed in -very ( , , „ f . vhi ,. h t0 h .. -shamed, line of her patrician face. A sid. the ered the head like puffs, made historic by Mra. Elizabeth «' 1 <i:• Stanton, th" original of the style being 'be carefully curled wig- w..rn by the men of Oid England and of America of the Revo lutionary era. A lesser number still banded the hair | down smoothly and tucked ,t behind I the ears.--after the fashion familiar to J all who have seen the late Miss Susan : Tt Anthony or her picture, while j great majority wore bangs, frizzes, any | iapted to her I her come | parlors the;.' greet < and each tells th- j in to have her nail "J often wonder u [ sist in teiiing such j would be just as well to b i with each other, since there I nothing of which to be i Rather, indeed, it Is woman - ther sne droppt nja nh ured. • women will p--i illy little lies. It i polr trtt; till sex is preformed. in f the sense that its prlmoidit are separated and oome to j life it: d ffeient germ cells. : Th- opposite school, that of epigen- , -sis. assumes that all eggs and every I sperm carry the pot-ntialties of both j sexes; .here tire no male and no ft - ! me •• . gas. no map or female sperm, in i the sen-"e that each carries only one I s : -f ch.ara-t* rs. but every germ c-H ! is * sex-hybrid This view tnain- I tains tlt.it the sex if th rmbryo is determined t>y- an internal condition j th..: is present in toe egg or sperm, which leads to the domination of ore • f the two possible ilternatlves. This I is modern epigenesis, as I understand it; predetermination perhaps, but not I preformntlon thr ugh the separation contrasted characters. From th!- m imagine that sex Henry Laurens Call. before the de partment of economies told of the work of the National Child Labor com mittee. of which he is tile assistant secretary. He pointed out that, in 1900. 1.7*0.178 Children between ten and fifteen years of age were engaged try.” Then came the Madison Square speech with its grotesque theory of a divided Government ownership of the railroad lines. As Mr. Bryan came into fame with a speech, so did ho break the back of his political fortunes with another at a time, apparently, when all determm • than one d Mens th ion lay be reached in mor It may be due to con- • pres at in the sperm i.ihgainfu: occupations, many of which his dreams were coming true. Th,*’ Madison Square speech was an acute disappointment to his new-found friends and a shock to his old ones. Mr. Bryan's political fortunes have never recovered from the effects of the blow ite struck at them that nigiit of his home-coming. Bryan’s Hopes and Prospects. Despite this backset and handicap, it is still clearly apparent that Mr. Bryan has hopes. Who is there to deny him? iti view of,, the results in 1904. it is hardly probable that the Beimont- Sheehan-Ryan band of patriots will have a large share in naming the can didate or shaping’ th-:- platform of the were destructive of health and m< a!s. as well as of economic prosperity. He urgi d. in behalf of the committee, the following demands in oppositon to child labor: First—The regulation of all indus tries in which children are employed. Second—Th- entire elimination of the child under fourteen as an indus trial factor. Third—The restriction of employ ment for children between fourteen . and sixteen. prohibiting the defective and tiie illiterate, and carefully regu- . iatlng the hours arid employment of Young Beveridge's Oratory And Georgia Agitation Baltimore Manufacturers’ Record. The battlefield is here. Thus laconically the young protagron- FotfriJ i herself to keep up the appearance nf [ youth as long as she can. Dyeing the j iiuir is becoming ?<> universal among ; fashion’s devotees lha’ it constantly j repuin-s enlarged facilities to aecom- I mo.late the patrons. For all calls are J made by appointment, and each w man has her own private room. It follows that one’s business is limited by the space for private rooms. Th«*s«r are or even external the bain one tvs for any internal idition that turns or the other is a -j he jhild ^ment of age stan- j party in 1908. The next candidate must our ibor laws ana' com pul iws-and the fitting' of curriculum to the needs A-.it style e o il thorn own f.u c and t the? plain: ."rime X-t daintily as the pairor it h- me. and each one has h af toilet articles. Manof I Takes a Long Time. ‘ ,_„,j , . J "To go over the entire head with d' i?-i w i i ■ requires six hours, and the hair inu i-idered * b- shnmi 'd both before and afti r. ftlv—in j "The c When I " or duii ! amount sex determinant I It now apper problem of sex ! sought in the same accounts for alternativ general, Mendeiian sburger. Bateson probable i rmination nee mism nat polnte you I Three l them. 1 retouc dye in 'sser i has to b •If a of by ti ties her inheritance in id Castle have :t the close parallel that xist between the two cases. In Mendeiian Inheritance also we have to face the alternative of preforfiia- tlon or epigenesis. The currently ac cepted interpretation of Mendeiian i:i- j herltancc is strictly one of prefornia- SJO. and cheap at that. | tion. Alternative characters are consider trm time and ! treated as entitles in the germ ceils, •rk. Many women have n ! that may be shuffled, but seldom get hair framing the face. * mixed. With each new deal the ehar- .m 1 £4 will transform ! acters are separated, one germ cell f . 'in ?'-, the hair has to be j getting one character and another the l :i! the roots very often, as j contrasted character, our rapidly, and the dyeing j In recent years we find that one px- repoated In time. tema! factor above all others has been oman has her hair taken care j supposed to have an intimate relation ; year, ICO for the year enti- | to sex determination, namely, nutrition, to one treatment a month. | An experiment of Landois in 1S67 fur nished the first erroneous evidence In favor of this view. claimed that he could produce at will males or females . the butterfly Vanessa by regulat- iitrin will want her silver hair ing the amount of food. A similar eon- o golden brown, perhaps, when elusion was reached by Mrs. Treat and hour Profess ’• H ram J. Mekseng *r read a paper b f -r- the same society in which he concluded as th results of‘Investi gations for a ;i fe insurance company that cjtles w t just as healthful as, and in some cases n-.ore healthful than country places. His specific conclu sion; were that subdividing his. expe rience ^tnto two classes, according to population, one including cities of 25,- non and :ver and the oth"r places.hav- , following- in the East ing a population of less than 23.900, he" rience show -d .13 of a week •of sickness rienee show-<1.is of a week of siknoss : a year of exposure for pltices of 25.000 and over, and .23 for places of kss than 26,000 inhabitants. The- general ■ lieaHh experience showed .57 of a week ■ f sickness in places of 25.000 and over, and th same rate for places-of less i than 23,000. The conclusion is that ; there , less sickness in large cities than in small places. The interesting point in eonection with this result is the fact . be a distinctive national figure, with a i-iear-cat background. Wh > is there today in the Democratic party that tits that description? He must come from an Eastern of doubtful State in the M'ddlp West. He must possess ideas of his own and an issue to. contest. Where is the man. what will be his issue? Mr. Bryan comes nearer to being the figure to fi’l these requirements than any one else. Governor Folk, of Mis souri. has not impressed himself strongly upon the party, and has no It would not be good politics yet to take a man from 1 Fv'Vue'Yhat ‘s'eeo'appH^Mons had : . " , Iy mad,-, in cou.nv f-r ,-v didate from tne South wno has ever 1 ist in the United States Senate of th ! theory, applied tor the instant to the. I suppression of the evils of "child a- j bor,” about which there is confessed- ! ly little accurate information, that j what for the moment seems to be I public opinion shall be substituted for constitutional checks and balances in ; Government explained nis absence from a "child-.abor” meeting in New j York city. j Kow that thrilling message mus; have tickled the amiable ladies in New ; York almost to death! ! while Senator B'evjridgc is on the ■■battlefield” it is hoped that some mem ber of the United States Senate, hav ing a regard for accuracy and unap palled by photographs a ml affidavits, sha 1 insist upon an Uyzing the mass i of about 120.COO words in Senator Bev- ' eridge's oration to show ;hq emptiness ! of his argument as to the main issue involved and the carelessness ! construction. The critc might dwell profitably upon the episode of the ora tion which brought from Senator Ba con. of Georgia, the following telegram | to Judge Wilkinson, of Atlanta: • ‘It was assorted yo-terdav in the : That i? sufficient to keep the hair ! properly dyed .and in good condition, nan ! Hut Hint one treatment is only a be- | ginning in many casr »ai " A ; turned ption certificates under the ’ child-‘abor law and all had been granted. Pieasc tele graph me if the statement is correct and if not. give number of certificates that have been granted. The exception certificates referred to were provided for in the Georgia child-labor act of August 1. 199S which prohibited after January 1. 1907, the j employment In factories of children im- . dor twelve years of age. Judge Wil- - kinson in whose province lies the grant- success i*- the "enorts ' ina: of 4,10 exception certificates, re- which reach Washington are true." The I"_ tJ Senator Bacon aR fo Ior '"‘ ottarrel between Roger Sullivan, na- been seriousiv discuss 'd, and his pres ent trials in Texas would tend to mrV- him unavailable. A man who gives some attention to politics was asked today. "Who is a , o .. Democrat irt Indiana with a national Is no more, and may be a little 1,,,.^-^ oitinc then 5m , repULUKM . "Tom Tagrgart,** was tho reply. Name another.” A Ions: pause; Risarsw^ss i » *•*-*• .jo* rr.’t ’ns liver u - w Ith secrets < her IiRrht blue eyes demand that wear lijarht colored hair. the J by Gentry in 1S73. Rtiev. B'e^eele Bri^s^= t Andrews, Fletcher, Kellogg and that it is the uppusue j the Republican party. "'Dr. Felix Adler lectured before the ] n ^*^2‘ 8 *? r stimo departfuept on ’’Ethical Training ^..mociauc ^success it the reports for Efficient Citizenship.” Franklin : m T lc I “Assertion in the Senat Ford, in the same section, read a paper JV 1 rrel h °‘'\ of Roger Sullivan, na- ; plications for exception certificate' maintaining that the press was in its I Z the law is incorrect.* Only ter organ!- na.ui. nat. tin to ..eat. it a\iii be County. Seekers for accurate' informa tion on the whole subject should bear the folio whig in mind: Citations by advocates of legislation for the cure of tho evils of "child la bor” from'Bullet in No. 69 of the L'nited States Census Bureau of date Jan uary 25. 1997. fail to emphasize the fact That the gerot mass of informa tion in tho bulletin is derived from schedules of tiie 1900 census, taken more than six years ago. They fail to emphasize, if even to mention, the statement by the Director of the Cen sus. cautious as it is. as follows:. "With the growth of population there has probably been a considerable in crease sine*' 1900 in the number of children who tire working for wages, except possibly in those communities where new laws imposing greater ro- strk tions upon the employment of young hildren have been enacted and are being efficiently enforced, but it is unlikely that, aside from the increase in numbers, a census taken at tho h> I present time would show conditions differing materially front those exist ing at the date of the twelfth -census.” They do not emphasize, if they even know, that Census Bulletin No. 57 of date October 19. 1906. covering cenor- allv the census of manufactures of 1905, which really refers to the. calen dar year 1904. shows that tho average number of wage-earners in the United States under sixteen years of age - n- ! gaged in manufactures decreased -e- | tween 1.900 and 1903 from 161.276 to 1 139.899. They fail to- emphasize, if they oven refer to the material on p age.'. 47 iid 48 of Bulletin 69, upon which the fol lowing statement is based: Average number of wage-earners under sixteen years of age employed in tiie manufacture of cotton goods and cotton small wares, as reported by tho census of manufactures: States. 13 4v. 1900. tnfbney and In need of better organi zation. this worn ui’s” bills, if they in the family account ,1 -i "liH-idcn --i P-" ,,!• to charity." This is one | v it.'- h ''h irlty covers a enormous. There in- wlu-n it out more, to ■autlful than it does :o- tet explains why white- >the > an steil seen in New York: the sylvan iik, where money is held ini? .i.t. 1 the ruril see- s.t: fii. - tin-.i must have "v would lie dipped in betm.e woman’s Foun- Alabama.. .. Georgia . . .. Kentucky .. .. Maryland .. .. Mississippi .. North C-a ro i n a South Carolina ’ Tennessee .. .. Texas Virginia .. .. His conclusion may be seriously ques tioned. because other statistics have given contradictory results (those of ^unnott. for example), and because it public and of the fact that he lives ! - ^ ___ "favorite son.” Perhaps the Demo- prineinally in the stems of hardy | cratic National Convention trill not be plants : in a mood to take a New York man ^ , Henry Bird, of the New York Ento- ! next timo - nft »ir tho experience of 1994. t. like changing iter hats is apparent that so many other oxter- ; mologlcal B-Jcietv. discovered him up unless he is a man of striking ability And always she has "the j na! factors than food may be involved j along the Bronx River, and said that a n( l overwhelming “availability.” The (■ will hit on the happy ; that the slight difference on which I there are large numbers of this species Democrats of Massachusetts are corn 'd Pc -pci a ,i Tonth. The White Crown of Glory. gall, )f I lie sisterhood, clts-ified is strong-minded) In grot tig o|.i gr:i,-efu!!\- ' r t«ll.\ i:t nature’s way, still whip- . rown of glory, but c-ir.t rarolj in fashion’s pass- tit,- w-iiiu-haiiasd grand ri-mc. rmo:, declares ihe beauty iln white-haired woman is or to return, and rightly, too. r chances, both s? way. Espe- t- i: to herself >' white, to re- he other color. Per haps she wears it a week, perhaps not so long. Then she tries something else. “Changing the color of iter hair gets to be n habit, like and gownt hope that she tones that will make of her a living. ; Busing based his conclusion may breathing picture with the atmosphere 1 due to other conditions of a Homier head. | If. in reality, nutrition “Of course site simply burns money ] iu determination in thus striving for tho ideal but this expect to find, I think, a far greater j yuitjeet to ravages from many, causes, norship. From Washington nowhere Is ipecles of faddist has i: In larg/- i disproportion of males to females in 1 FO tli«t a large'increase of his family j there any active constructive Demo- And I the offspring of the rich and of the j niav not be expected. : cratic work to he seen. In this sain-.- section Profet,=or B. G. A Possible Democratic- Chance. bundle rhat does it matter? "White hairs hint \ soi ially and in a busl , iall>- does a woman if her hair premateui store ii to Its natural color. "You c annot affinal to bo thought old. Tills ;; youth's day. White hairs are tho hall mark of age.” It seemed brutal. Rue she is young. To her it was a simple statement of a hard, cold fa, t. Another curious feat ure of this latter-day transformation is ilia' the white-haired grande dame's pia,-,- is not taken by a replica of her- soli" of former vears. with dead black hair, perhaps. Instead another, a third woman has been reconstructed. Phoe nix-like front what is left of the other the offspring of the rich r class is increasing rapidly. j poor than Busing’s statistics show. If "The Hornier hair still leads as the ' further evidence Is needed it i? fur nished by the recent experiments of Cuerot with rats and of Schuitze "with mice. Even extreme conditions of starvation and of feeding produced no effects upon the birth rate of males to j females. "Wilder, of Cornel], said that he looked Some profess -to see Democracy's forward to the titfie when no one would chance in the carrying forward of Mr. be thought to hav£ a liberal education Roosevelt’s policy if the Republicans who had not dissected the brain of a 'hould nominate <a man of the Fair- dogfish. banks type. Senator Carmack seemed Before tiie Physical Society the in- to express this view the other day. j terest centred around a discussion of when he said in the Senate: “You Re- Many women read papers before the , radium. Professor E. W. Rutherford publicans have got either to nominate k blue eyes may wear it. Thus ’various sections. Miss Bertha M. j read a paper showing how he could Theodore Roosevelt or give us back 'ver likely to become Vulgarly j Clarke.read a paper on “.The Variation ; convert a similar substance, actionium, ’ our platform.” The fight is expected of the Heat of Mixture with Concen- ; jpto radium. He holds that the ele- ! to come in the next Republican Na rration and Temperance.” and Miss . ments of the radium group, like uran- tional Convention on the question ium -and actinium,’ are sp closely related whether Roosevelt's economic policies powers of corporations, re- . , , , . . , -woilen fortunes and increasing Cnange. Others to read papers were Miss Ella H. Richards Miss Alice A. j most desirable color, and therefore the j most fashionable, but only women hav ing brilliant brown, or the yellow eyes —a. cross between brown and hazel, that you sometimes see—can look their best in this striking red-brown, shin ing hair: though certain women hav ing dark blu it is n« coriimon The Blue-Eyed Woman. Wue-eyed^votnen who^av^fh^rulS ~ vity of , lh l A . ir paused by Certain j tS it that one Is probably descended j foTeUrblm ped might be Compounds During the Temperature | f r0 m the other. - ; during ?w, Fanny C. Gates one on "The Conduc- fwo. and she is wearing hair of a dif- | ferent shape, perhaps of an entirely! dlffe-ent color, from the locks of her youth. Sometimes her hair changes oolor Witli eacli gown she wears Of the whimsical fancies of the one who changes ihr color of her hair “lie does her jewels and iter gowns, the beauty doctor has tills to say: "She has more money and time at her command than common sense. That is what ails the freakish woman. Inti 1 -■ sense largely developed might be I called ash color, with a glint of gold. I The woman whose locks were snowy j white may have them dyed that shade and the careless observer will riot real- I ize she has used a dye. He will know | there is a. difference, somehow, and will decide that in some occult way I site has renewed her youth. Even the i features seem younger and softer when I framed by this girlish-looking hair, I which is not obtrusive, like the bright- ■ihr is a bonanza, good as a gold mine. ! hair of ]e >r shades. "It is characteristic of the one first having her hair dyed, however, to earnestly desire the rich yellow or gold tints, partly because she admires them, but also for the deeper reason that she believes the shining hair more surely will bring hack to her the lost and pre cious days of her youth. "if the years have dimmed her eyes and left their traces too deeply on iter Jtnplexion for art to repair the dam- ige, then she must be content with Knox and Miss Gertrude Rerlinwham. At the Museum of Natural History there was exhibited under the. auspices of the association last night an Indian not, said to be the first discovered on Manhattan: The pot is a brown clay affair, and was found in a street near Inwood about two months ugo by W. L. Calver, a scientific investigator in terested In Indian relics. The vessel is about a foot high, bulging at the centre, and is supposed to have been buried by the Indians in a grave. It is termed a “dead pot” because the scone and power of control over the railway systems are to he aban doned or continued. Mr. Roosevelt and his friends are ready to throw the l whole weight of their great influence I on the side of the candidate for the nomination who pledges himself to continue along the lines Mr. Roosevelt has marked. _____ Unless some man comes forward l : within the next twelve months to chal- VVashington Correspondence New York j ienge the -supremacy of Mr. Bryan it Evening Post. would seem that mere force of prece- FOR DEMOCRATIC PM Washington. Jan. 28.—Have'the lead- dent alone would make the Nebraskan ] rent year between 2,00 rs of the Democratic party resigned : oj ;, m tat* candidate. If is high time dren under 12 years of small piece has been chipped out of the | themselves to William J. Bryan as a 1 f non et !? 'a'’" 1 ' ! ‘V ''j™ 11 ^ bottom to show ’that like the man • perpetual candidate? It would se em upon a plan of campaign and with whom it was interred it was hors i so. from the lack of speculation and j «», themselves the pos- January 30 was probably correct in its statement that there are not 3 ono in ail tiie faetorles of the whele State coming under the terms of the “child-tabor" law. but it must be recalled that in its issue of Jan uary 1 the Constitution announced that the section of the Georgia “child-labor" act going Into effect, that day “frees 5.000 working children in Georgia.” Of course that statement, similar to I other statements in Georgia newspa pers of the time, must have been furn- | ished to the Constitution and published | by it in good faith. But i: was on a par with many of ihe statements which have been made in promotion of ■’child-labor'’ legislation or In attempts to create an impression that the legis lation was called for. and it was on a par with the assertion of Senator Bev eridge, who believed at first he was dealing with facts, just as he thought that a few photographs of exceptional cases could be legitimately used in promotion of a general measure affect ing thousands of cases by no means approaching those of the photographs. Pressed for evidence In support of his statement that applications had been granted for the employment of 3.009 children, referred to in Senator Bacon’s telegram, Mr. Beveridge said that he would try to fish it up then, except that he did not want to disarrange his papers. About 18,000 or 20 000 words farther on In his oration appears a quotation-from an Atlanta newspaper which Mr. Beveridge says “corrects my statement a moment ago." The quotation of date January 5, 1907. is to the effect that at the lime it was estimated "by Ordinary Wilkinson that in Fulton County alone during the eur- 2,000 and 3.000 call age, may be put to work in the factories." There is a vast difference between : an estimate that between 2,000 and Total South Total U. 1345. 3.094 5 406 101 205 413 40.426 4.500 SJO 1,11(5 25,307 40.258 per New York some time ago, is said to velt. Root. Taft. Fairbanks, Foraker, Repu^'tcan party as it is organized to- have sold for $500. Shaw and Cannon are under discussion : has f. 01 ‘ i , ts m!11 " purpose the win- __ 0 „ Except for the discussion on sex, ! by Republicans.;. -Fairbanks. _ Foraker j aje^ub-Jthat^Tor Senator Beveridge’s benefit,, the interest centred around the depart ment on economics, where Professor Figures for Arkansas. Louisiana and West Virginia in cotton goods are in cluded in the total for the whole coun try not distributed by States, and fig ures for Georgia in cotton small wares have like inclusion. Individuals accustomed to handle figures Intel-igeiftly for the purpose of discovering the truth about aiiv situa tion and knowing the impossibility of depending upon figures of different censuses or even on schedules of tho same > census - for absolutely accUVatO and reliable comparisons, as is sug gested in this very Bulletin, -regard such figures as those quoted-as more indicative than positive. Such indi viduals. however, know that the fig ures -of the 1905 census, showing the average number of cotton-mi l opera tives in the South under sixteen years of age to be 23,135. or even a census estimated number 31,085. prove the ab surdity of any such estimates as 60,- 009 children or so ono children four teen years of age or under in Southern cotton mills. As a matter of fact. Bul letin" No. 09 says: “In spite of the increase- in tiie act ual number of child operatives ten to fifteen years of age in the Southern States the tendency Is apparently away from the employment of chil dren. * * * The average number of oil axes increased 4.3 per cent during the five-year period from 1900 to 1905, Whi g tiie average number under six teen increased, only four-tenths of '4 per cent.” Such Individuals know. too. that there is no basis Cor intelligent action in behalf of children in the mills in comparison of figures for the South in 1905 with figures for other parts of 'he country in that year, but that the way of safety lies in comparing till the conditions in the South of 1905 with all the conditions in other parts of 000 children may be put to work and j t' ne country when the cotton-mi-1 in- the statement that 3,000 had been given industry there was at the stage it It is certificates to work and it Is hoped I-lust reached in the South. brilliant hue. One con- Irving Fisher, of Yale, hit straight on and Cannon-are -making active efforts ordinated to success at the polls This ; the press service or the correspondents ’NOTICE TO SUBSCRIBERS fur the nomination. -So far as the.Re- ! | ia s been demonstrated time and again ; ^-ho sent out his assertion may, now ! . i i i publicans are concerned the campaign j 11 Ccmgtflss- Tne party will be hope- that they have the full text of his 1 EXS-UllMS JEO61 Oil yCUT DSj- i .. .... lesslv split seemlnelv on .“nme ones- 1 . I _ c , . , . , 1 , . k . ■ . mine r lsut-r, ui late. 1111 scraigni on jiuniicaiis e xuiacoreu '--a 1 Wf>,rvln * about the size j splcuous fact is no one now wants biack ; the head the doctrine of socialism ad— for the Presidency is • already ■ ,J , — ' ; . , . hair, hven the one whose tresses j vanced by Henry Laurens Call the day way. Mr. Gorteivbu’s resignation from j tlbn ’ . 1 ? ut in , end discipline alwkys j pjanation. But more than one of the bet- tiair . .If 11 Lie woman who dyed j °fice were black as Eblis will wear before, declaring it dangerous and ad- the National Committee was a ines: ponspic nous in- 1 nothing darker than soft. bright j vocating ■rown. her hair wt dividual in thi- community in which I brown, if her complexion calls for dark rmmT'rnntroi .-.ijo lived, the “ub.iei 1 of Jest and snpi- hair. Never will she return to black J , lr . ( after having worn life’s gift-the white : Undoubted ... the modern statement or a chemist on tne control of industry is to be found.in the themselves and organisations are being lair dyeing is worth heeding, growth of governmental power in gen- : perfected. vhe ww ,,, ,,...11.. a , , I . , ■ -{ '"fl "°men contemplating era i -and of popular confidence in it. | Meanwhile, so far as one can tell in hh twisted' u-he - ° r ’l "1-^ I.™, 1 - he color of locks. He The doctrine of socialism lies at the ex- ! the false political atmosphere of Wash- ntt tills,ed. uhen she thus interfered ! sa>s: The woman who dies her hair t.--qg, *t,„ .1—; , .— th p D em , )( i rats are doing noth- , - sup cion. 1- or f acre was ever .1 doubt in The minds of the serious as to whether “he was a proper person to be admitted , - into mu ietj when she used a hair dye. ! subject bf h _ w There was always the suspicion that I however, by the women contemplating moi.ilh obiique. or at Inst a , changing tiie color of her locks. He The doctrine of socialism lies at the ex- under ‘CSS1V. spm seonnnx.y on some /lues- [speech, give equal publicity to his ex- ! - npr T t tp lb 1 1PW vo „ nn from J Ion - *’uJ in the end discipline alnays , pjanation. But more than one of the ’ i OW yOu SnailG Oil piece S*hp s r a “, d ,h^ ZVZ!"? ! ^ t -? n i a 2.^ pers 7.^ y , consulting their; the books. Due from date on n i the label. Send in dues and with nature’s laws Everybody knew because she applied interfered sa i" s: The woman who dyes her hair treme opposite pole from tiie doctrine jngton. thf lot permits it to be dyed, is taking • of. iaissez faire, and we are moving jng. Then the stuff, | Stances Oi having it ruined. For it is toward socialism dangerously fast, other thar used the BB0I dye herself, i possible to use dyes which will irre There is no talk of any candidate other than Bryan. There is no pre- Unpreparedness should not he tho excuse of the Democrats if they are again defeated by their onponents in next year’s -national election. THE STORY-TELLING LINCOLN. and SO thirklv and crudely ~that "her I drably injure 'the'haiiT‘uVould the*'‘success’ 0 -" SU ?-” «-*® bS '-fi??-* 1 - 0 P aratlon ' f0 I- the campaign that one of socialistic projects. ’ can se e. "hurch SCOUT'S IDfl OF II attempts eialism cannot be put in practice with out opposition. To maintain itself^so- oialism must hold the opposing class in subjection. Nominally this subjection hair was sticky Usually riblack face. Ilk it-hand she sat in the family j Of Public Interest. And tiie good women who would not he found dead with five on their hair COUld not hear the sermon or the pray ers because so engrossed watching the sister who had so fearfully and ’won derfully transformed herself. The writer has one such in mind. It was after she was left a widow that iter snowy .ml really beautiful 'hirk liar suddenly turned to tho color of the raven’s wing. "Ill course of time, her jetty locks, or her feminine charms, or both, won her I verslty, where hundreds of papers ! mical matters at least Is unnecessary : very rich husband, when a yoar or j were read, discussing hundreds of dif- and harmful. Sometimes it is added two had passed, .-he stopped dyeing iter | ferent tojdcs. The most interest was I as a corollary that not only should hair. And titen was witnessed a dire [ excited by a discussion before the and startling spectacle. Her hair be came green and ve’iow in streaks and From the Springfield Republican. If one is in doubt as to the original ~ ■ also renew for the year 1907. case | that they and he are fellow-victims of ' GREAT TRUST BORN ON JAN. 1. misinformation. The Manufacturers’ Record has. since the inception of this organized “child-labor” agitation, published fre quently indisnutab-e facts showing the connection between State “child-labor” legislation and the movement to place ' (Portland. Maine, Dispatch in N. Y. American). The birth of :he year marked the birtli of the greatest coastwise steam ship irust in America. Charles Wyman Morse, of New the control of labor in the country In good story whose parentage. j the hands of Congress. It has again needs he fairly oid. it has hecome a " a * n warned- Its Southern con- ■ to father it uron Abraham i temporaries and weil-mennmg hut un- This is. perhaps, not a pen- j in f or y’ p d men and women in the South. ,*. Lincoln’s storv-telllnsr gift • tnislocl info supporting the agitation, of 7lis- ! ttie certain end of the movement car- SEX ^ Lincoln’s story-telling publican 'activity anil the Democratic j since there is nothing punitive or , , . somnolence is startling. “ ! creditable to his fame in such a ten-1 J** 011 0I l now , ou ^ * or ten voars - In so f.:r ns the Democratic party is • deney of posterity. AH the jrood sto- r orn of a unI ^ n of fnlse pretense and represented by the minority side of »the ries are credited to him. for the same jguorance ard pr<omoted. no matter Senate it has precious little to be 1 reason that all the infamies of tiie . , w dislntprestea. tne intent, by abso- would be a benevolent paternalism, but j proud of . Thf . hjgh “water ^'mark of I French "revolution''' are “shouldered hl ‘ e . reck essness In handling actual sit- in political history’ it IS the universal ; Democratic' Senatorial strategy has : largelv unon Robespierre. In neither untlons . disregard for ordinary accu- expenence that the party m power to ; bee ,. t0 - nord Hke sheep when he was case, ‘perhaps, does it much matter rac >\ in handling ascertainable facts. 1 Tl 1 rn C fl If Culf *1 fftl inttf .1T t pL’ ^ UDDTI . . . _ _ _ mroemne Vi mrlnra* nufi rlrvt! • - -.. From the New York Tribune. The American Association for tho Advancement of Science continued its sessions yesterday at Columbia Uni- intrnch itself against attacks, soon usurps more power, employs indefen sible and oppressive methods and tries to establish itself in the enjoyment of special privileges. The doctrine of iaissez faire is that governmental interference in econo- It is not on record that they have ever used hint. Their strategy -does npt carry them so far. Last year, when the Rate bill was under consideration and the President government let Individuate alone, but ! opposed or threatened 6y hi<? own | where truth ends and fiction begins. : evas j2?’’ an ^ deliberate or partj' associate®. ^Ir. Roosevelt has j That the story-telling- Lincoln of tra- misrepresentation of condi- used the Democratic Senators pull j dition is telling 1 a great many more : Opposed, as it has always been, himself out of a hole more than once. Spot ‘ never as: •i 1 ways !• >1 Oil .j i»* 'even pripv'.v ecame ’stories than he really told in the flesh j to f the commercial employment of im- is proved by a current magazine writer, I rnature ml uo r s, it has been no less op- unwittinglv. for he Inserts in his a r- ! P° sed to Jhls child-labor agitation, tide the following. 'because the evidence has been steadllv During a critical time In the Civil i that the result' of the agi "War, when the ’Senate had been nar- „. --- ticularlv obstructive, one of his ardent ,’ an -? ° Id ’ than tat ion were more detrimental to the sympathizers burst In unon him and finished his tirade by asking: “What’s the use of the Senate, any- wav?‘ of unde’ none t -><% r sh* did n. hair; n n.Iy. •‘‘xpliJnei the bpouty j Prof 'es wun- bN« k. her. a!!v m.'.de th uT’a^rstand hr-w to .grt tiie various ahndes. Sho used a \cge!ahlo d» and did no* first shampoo h^r hair. It cl’pM not h* ]n being sticky. "Vegetable dvrs and oil will piny ;h 'oft-ssor T. H. Morgan gave an in- I terest. and the motive of self-interest t .° aa f- , . IS a perrormance ^ sting talk, in which he exploded the leads him to secure the maximum of toey should become accustomed. American Sooiety of Naturalists on : that individuals should let one another ?SS rs if JwfvwLJiL 0 ! 6 "The Biological Significance and Con- J alone. "Live and let live,” and "Each ' b -!;v lf t ^ irol of Sex." Tho room in Schermer- 1 for himself are the mottoes of this : ml f h * ac i.?,T P n? -fn r i, them ‘ ’ touched ! horn Hai! In which the discussion was type of individualism. i se l. e . s ’ But ’ a ® worl< ? knows, . ,, lors. and held was packed with men and women, i The reasoning by which these indi- j nothing came of it. Bv exercising the Mr Lincoln was drinking a cup of i shower : and others were at the doors trying to vidualistic doc-trines were supported ' P 1 " 10 ? 4 , ag.lMy the President got back tea In his homely fashion he poured ! get in. Finally- janitors had to he may be brieflv stated in two proposi- I ,nto his own f °ld before the storm ! the tea from the cup to the saucer and itand the i stationed there' to prevent annovance i tions—first, each individual is the best broke, and the Democrats were left. I back: again to cool it off. undisturbed to the speakers ' ! judge of what subserves his own in- as the> P°P“l a r phrase has it, ‘holding ( by the caller’s vehemence. the bar.” It is a performance to which “Well” -said the man impatiently, “what’s the use of the Senate?” “I have just shown you.” was Lin coln’s answer, and once more the tea was poured. The man looked puzzled. Then a well fed and the pooi-iv fed’ did not I wellbeing for society as a whole. ■through, but they have got neither ! great light broke upon him. “You mean bear this out He said in part' In the light of the experience of the thanks nor prestige out of their share it enables public passion to’ cool off?” , There are few biological questions j past fifty years it is not difficult to in the enterprise. Even now the House ; The greatest of American Presidents n-.i'chief with the h“ir. Neither ] that appeal more directly to the liu- I sec wherein each of these two propo- j Democrats are divided in their allegi- nodded and drank his tea. d'.! she know how to apply- the stuff. ! man race than whether the sex of the 1 sitions is in error. First, it is not true i ane < - - A K° oci P arr of th<? m a >'e dissat- Years ago the same point was iilus- ; ; a tedious process. The hair ! child can be determined by the exter- that each man can be trusted to pur- ! with the leadrship of Mr. Wil- j tratefi in a story told of Washington ti : '-: lie separated strand from strand j nal conditions under which" the parents J sue his own best interests. Some men \v’,: e the ehis bring applied. The ! live, or whether the conditions are in- | need enlightenment owing to ignor- hat constitutes their best in- and others need restraint the conditions which the agitation pre tended to rectifv Individuals still under the impres sion, through uflcorrected daily news paper reports, that 3,000 children under York, owner of a great chain of hanks, and former "ice king." organized here the Consolidated Steamship Lines Company-, with an authorized capital of *60 000.000. Wh the incorporation of this com pany Mr. Morse brings to actual frui tion his ambition to monopolize prac tically all of the Atlantic coastwise trade of both North and South Amer ica. Mr. Morse has Invested S42.000.900 in the purchase of tyvelve coaster lines, his most recent acquisition being the Mallory Line, for which ho j>aid ?9,- 000.000. This great consolidation has long been looked forward to by. Wail street, yvhere the'stock of the trust will be listed a' $100 par. Financiers expect it will not be long before the trust will, absorb the Mor gan Line, its only formidable rival. The Panama Railroad and - Steamship Line, the United Fruit Company, the New York and Cuba Steamship Melt Company are expected to follow. Through recent negotiations .Air. Morse secured control of the Civde l '■ 12 vears of age were, through exception ! Steamship Company, :bo Metropolitan “ ; certificates, permitted to work in one j Steamship Company and the Eastern a county of Georgia alone. Fulton, should I Steamship Company. He had been in jumped 'rom white to I teresting talk, in yvhith he exploded n.e t -v..—- ...... - . .. . hn; 7- ihe blunder usu- j Lunduis theory that the amount of wellbeing for himself; and. second. 1 H^ mo . c J" at * in Congress Unorganized, novice who does not ! nutrition is responsible for the deter- I since society is merely the sum of in- ‘ n * he . H £, use . mmority nas been ruination of sex. Statistics, he said. ! dividual.', the effort of each yvili so- { equally ineffective. They have helped taken from tho rich and the poor, the i cure thereby also the maximum of 44l e President get some of his bills j . i. ^ . ! „.:tk,; ~ ~ t _ , TniTmffh nil f t h r- liavp irnt •rest5 Kv^n where governmental Interven- ion i? impracticable or inadvisable, here will still he s-ond reason for at- empring’ betterment of conditions hroueli the influence of o::e < ’ass unon rto v iee uses it as a shampoo. Then j tarnal. and therefore beyond the power \ u nn'- - : n »t make a sudden jump ] of control. This problem has been ex- :r cu whi:e to black. That is imp era- j amined by the statistician, argued by * n I philosophers, discussed by the natural- nr.o irust be ns diplomatic when ists and exploited by the quack. The- ®.s when arranTlnff a treaiv » cries of sex determination have flour- ^ fh a fcre:en country. I: is neither | ished like weeds, and. while perennial. /wise nor necessary, if you would pre- j are apt to be like their prototypes, serve thf illusion of youth for your I shortlived. The history of these tho- Bublsct. to take the fren^ral public on- i ories. nevertheless, is full of interest 11 raj v into your confidence. Indeed, (and not without significance. Even a this beautr business is one renuirimr j brief survey will brinjr out the salient very nicest sense of the fit:n*s«s of * points. } nf two thirflrv. | Th- hi story of our science has | Ignorant Now, wo of thr. present da\. export i shown, in fai l, that preformation and i rose tha class, dye hnir so artistically .-an even n-aV;.- in-r mv bend believe h*-r liair tanging . o' -r 'and necessarily vacillates. One school, led classes to give tuition to t naturally and renown g its youth of its j the preformationists. assumes that only j instructed, we begin to see an Hams. An account ha« recently been ; and Jefferson. Jefferson asked, accord- given irt the Washington dispatches bo ing to the older version: “Of what the Evening Post of the effort making use is the Senate?" He had just supplant Mr. Williams and to make ' poured a cujrof hot tea into a saucer. BHHH I Steamship remember that the national census for i control for some time of -)ic Huds the year ended December 31. 1904. Navigation Company which is tjie found but 7,295 persons under 16 years largest feeder of .the Atlantic coast of age at work in factories in the whole State of Georgia, and only 728 of them in Atlanta, the seat of Fulton by Col. Silas W. Burt, who relates a remarkable incident, hitherto unpub lished, of Civil War history. It is not necessary in this connection to do more than quote the words that Jell from Mr. Lincoln’s lips: "I believe I have the popuiar reputa tion of being a story-teller, but I do not deserve the name in its general lines. Into the Eastern Steamship Com- nany Mr. Morse had consolidated the Portland Steamship Company, the Boston and Bangor Steamship Com pany, the Kennebec Steamship Com pany and the International Steamship Company. This line does practically all the freight, passenger dnd maritime business between St. John's and Bos ton. At Boston the coastwise bus iness was taken over by the Metropol itan Steamship Company to Richmond. Beginning at New York and op:-r- donc henc- th-' efforts of instruct anoti ttn accord. social agitations and one class to educate or sr. The world ernsists asses, the educated and the and it is essential for prop- the former should be allowed that a epigenesis arc two poles of thought he- j r ,, donvnSte the latter. Hu: once we n hiJ twe-.-n which speculation continually | admit that it is proper far the lnstrtict- ttn- rm >st ing to lack of self-control in following Champ Clark, of Missouri, the leader, and Washington said: "You have Just j sense: for it is not. the story itself, but j between* 0 Boston ty'iVni •-.V y'’ t'nt-m. ' It would be an exaggeration, perhaps, answered it yourself; the Senate is the ; its purpose, or effect, that interests . ^or' ” to say that the Democrats in Congress saucer into which we pour our are disorganized, but certainly they are : iation to cooi it.” If some one s entirely lacking in an effective organ- f come along and show that izs.tion. Apparently this defect is as': eighteenth century Englishman of true of >h n party at large as of it- rep- : err Walpole's time had made the same i so, too, uie saai-pueoa ui e. ie.u.-ai or : tf, 000.009 The Choi point in exartjy the same wav concern- i the edge of a rebuke may be blunter) ' -,^’- n Ad m.are titan S4 000 ing the House of Lords, it would not j by an appropriate story, so as to save j be suprising. 1 wounded feeling end yet serve the. pur- tother avc cue. the male Or the female characters ’carried by. each. egg. or sperm: he boundless ence I better nt puss,; mi man resentntives in Congress. When Mr. Bryan came bvi- k from abroad his fortunes were nt their flood. . A’t the political wonder-workers and soothsayers agreed that there was “a ■ drift toward Rryan." All shades and classes of Democrats had begun to sneak we':! of him. The Eastern wing of the party. Cleveland's oid followers had begun to view the Nebraskan less tpprel Lincoln undoubtedly appropriated all j pose. No, I am not simpl the stories he COuid acquaint himself ! teller, but store- toiling as an emollient with, regardless Of their antiquity; and orteti. no doubt, he adapted their point, to the condition? of the people he lived among. His own explanation of his extraordinary propensity to anecdote in speech or conversation is ex-v-ilen!.'v NOTICE TO SUBSCRIBER % Examine label on your im. per. It tells how you stand on York tv us. no longer "the enemy's coun- j given tn the current Century magazine less saves me much frit tir.n and It may be added that this are-nr with the view which most students of i u . e , . Lincoln’s oiiaracter had reached. Col. DOOKS. 1-v. I. till .atr 0~J Burt's authoritative report of the Pres- I JJag label. Send. I. 1 ' fines nyrj ' ah?o renew for the year 1907. ident's remark.- intere'rtingr is. however, nopo md valuable.