Atlanta Georgian and news. (Atlanta, Ga.) 1907-1912, October 01, 1907, Image 4

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I THE ATLANTA GEORGIAN AJS T 1) NEWS. The Kind Toil Have Always Bought, and which has been in use for over 30 years, has borne the slgnnturo of and has been mode under his per sonal supervision sinro its infancy. Allow no ono to deceive you In tills. All Counterfeits, Imitations and “ Just-as-good” are but Kxperitnonts that trifle with and endanger the health of Infants and Children—Experience against Experiment. What is CASTORIA Castorla is n harmless substitute for Castor Oil, Pare goric, Drops and Soothing Syrups. It is Pleasant. It contains neither Opium, Morphine nor Other Narcotic substance. Its ago is its guarantee. It destroys Worms and allays Feverishness. It eurcs Diarrhoea and Wind Colic. It relieves Teething Troubles, cures Constipation and Flatulency. It assimilates the Food, regulates tlio Stomach nnd Bowels, giving healthy and natural sleep. The Children’s Panacea—Tho Mother’s Friend. GENUINE CASTORIA ALWAYS Bears the Signature of ASK FOR NEW BIOS FOB THE T The' water board and the finance when the main reaches the tap at Ca committee at council met jointly at 4 o'clock Monday afternoon and took up the waterworka question, the session resulting In an agreement on several points relative to the Improvement of the waterworks. It was agreed that the main from the river to the reservoir should he com pleted, and that work should not stop The M You Have Always Bought * In Use For Over 30 Years. ,THf CCNTAUN « . TT HIIRUT •TBCCT, NfW YORK CITY. PULL JUSTICE FOE ROADS AND PUBLIC Continued from Page One. woVklnr. the thrifty, the resolute, and the honent. But we do wish to see that the necessary atruggle In life shall be carried on under genuinely democratic conditions; fhat, so far as human ac tion can safely provide It, there shall be an approximately fair start; that there shall be no oppression of the weak, and that no man shall be permit, ted to acquire or to use a vast fortune by methods or In ways that are tor tuous and dishonest. NEED WISE LAW8, "Therefore we need wise laws, and we need to have them resolutely ad ministered. We can get such laws and. Mich administration only If the people nro alive tu, their Interests. The other day I listened to an admirable sermon by Bishop Johnston, of western Texas. Ills theme was thgt the Vital element In Judging any maA should be his con duct, nnd neither his position nor his pretensions; and, furthermore, that freedom could only stay with a people which has the habit of self-mastery- AF.he said, the price of liberty Is not only eternal vigilance, but eternal vir tue; and 1 may add, eternal common CnHC ' MUST MASTER 8ELF. * “Each of you fathers and mothers here Knows that If your sons are to do well In the world they must know how to master themselves. Every man must have a master; if he Is not his own master, then somebody else will be. This Is Just as true of public life as of private life. If we can not master ourselvqr, control ourselves, then sooner or later we shall have to submit to outside control; for there must be control somewhere. "One way of exercising such control Is through the laws of the land. Ours Is a government of liberty, but It L government of that orderly liberty which comes by and through the hon est enforcement of nnd obedience the law. At Intervals during the few months the appeal has been made to me not to enforce the law against certain wrongdoers of great wealth be cause to do so would Interfere With the business prosperity of the country. Under the effects of that kind of fright which when sufficiently acute we call panic, this appeal has been mode to me even by men who ordinarily behave as decent cltlxens. RICH MAN'8 CRISIS. “One newspaper which has Itself strongly advanced this view* gave prominence to the statement of a cer tain man of great wealth to the effect that the so-called flnnnclnl weakness ‘was due entirely to the admitted In tention of President Roosevelt to pun ish the large moneyed Interests which had transgressed the laws.’ I do not admit that this has been tho main cause of any business troubles we have had;.hut It Is possible that |t has been a contributory cause. If so, friends, as far 'as I am concerned It must bo accepted as a disagreeable but un avoidable feature In a course of policy which as long ns 1 am president will not be changed. “In any groat movement for right eousness, where the forces of evil are Itrongly intrenched, it Is unfortunately Inevitable that some unoffending peo ple should suffer In company with the real offenders. This Is not our fault. It is the fault of those to whose de ceptive action these innocent people owe their false position. WILL HELP RIGHT. “A year or two atfo certain repre sentatives of labor called upon me and In the course of a very pleasant con versation told me that they regarded me as 'the friend of labor.* I answer ed that I certainly was, and that I would do everything in my power for the laboring man except anything that was w rong. “I have the same answer ^ make to the business man. ? wit* oo everything 1 can do to heJp business conditions, except anything that is wrong. And It would be not merely wrong, but In famous, to fall to do all that can be done to secure the punishment of those wrongdoers whose deeds are pecufirffly reprehensible because they are ' not committed under the stress of want. “Whenever a serious effort Is mifde to cut out what Is evil In our political life, whether the effort takes the shape of warring against the gross and sordid forms of evil In some municipality, or whether It takes the shape of trying to secure the honest enforcement of the law’ as against very powerful and wealthy people, there are «ure to be certain individuals who demand that the movement stop because It may hurt business. NO DAMAGE DONE. "In each case the answer must be that wo earnestly hope and believe that there will be no permanent damage to business from the movement, but that If righteousness conflicts with the fan cied needs of business, then the latter must go to the wall. We can not afford to substitute any other test for that of guilt or Innocence, of wrongdoing or welldoing, In Judging any man. “If a man does well, if he acts hon estly, he has nothing to fear from this administration. But so far as In me lies the corrupt politician, great or small, the private citizen who trans gresses the Iaw # —be he rich or poor— shall be brought before the Impartial Justice of a court. Perhaps I am most anxious to get at the politician W’ho Is corrupt, because he betrays a great trust; but assuredly I shall not spare his brother corruptionist who shows himself a swindler In business life; and, according to our power, crimes df fraud and cunning shall be prosecuted as relentlessly as Crimea of brutality and physical violence. NEED CITIZENS' AID. “We need good laws and we need, above nil thing**, the hearty aid of good citizens In supporting nnd enforcing the laws. Nevertheless, men and wom en of this great state, men and women of the middle West, never forget that law nnd the administration of law, Im portant though they are. must always occupy a wholly secondary place ns compared with the character of the av erage citizen himself. On this trip I shall speak to audiences In each of which there will be many men who fought In the Civil war. ‘You who wore the blue nnd your brothers of the Bouth who wore the gray know that in war no general, no matter how good; no organization, no matter how perfect, can avail If the aeya Hill. A recommendation to thl« effect will be made to council. It wa* further agreed that bids for a new pump at Hemphill station should be advertised for. The reser voir question was left with the special council committee and the county com missioners. The centrifugal and the vertical pumps again clashed In combat ami, as usual, nothing definite was done. Grasp Your : Opportunity Direct from the- ■peace; but I have no sympathy at all with those who believe that In the world as It now is we can afford to see the average American citizen lose the qualities that In their sum make up a good fighting man. DON’T 8HIRK DUTY. “The man or woman who shirks his or her duty occupies a contemptible position. You here are the nuis^md daughters of the pioneers. I preach to you no life of ease. 1 preach to you the life of effort, the life that finds Its highest satisfaction In doing well some work that is well worth doing. “So much for what concerns every man and every woir.rx In this country. Now, a word or two as to matters which are of peculiar interest to this region of our country.. “Since I have been president I have traveled In every state of this Union, I but my traveling has been almost en tirely on railroads, save now and then by wagon or on horseback. Now', I have the chance to try traveling by river; to go down the greatest of our rivers, the Father of Waters. THE WATERWAYS. “Now, I am to try a steamboat. 1 am a great believer In our railway sys tem, and the fact that I am very Arm in my belief as to tho necessity of the government exercising a proper super vision and control over the railroads does not In the least Interfere with the other fact that I greatly admire the large majority of the men In nil post tlons, from the top to the bottom, who build and run them. Yet, while of course I am’anxious to see these men, and therefore the corporations they represent or serve, achieve the fullest measure of legitimate prosperity, nev ertheless ns this country grows I feel that we enn not have too many high roads and that In addition to the Iron highroads’ of our railway system we should also utilize the great river high ways which have been given us by nature. BACKED BY NATION. “We should be prepared to put the nation collectively back of the move ment to Improve them for the nation's use. Our know ledge at this time Is not such as to permit me to go Into details, or to say definitely Just what the nation should do; but most assuredly our great navigable rivers are national assets Just as much as our great seat oast harbors. “Exactly .as it is for the Interest of all the country that our great harbors should be fitted to receive in safety the largest vessels of the merchant fleets of the world, so by deepening nnd oth erwise our rivers should be fitted to bear their part In the movement of our merchandise; and this Is especially true of the Mississippi and Its tribu taries, which drain the Immense and prosperous region which makes in very fact the heart of our nation; the basin of the Great Lakes being already unit ed with the basin of tho Mississippi, and both regions being Identical in their products and Interests. Water ways are peculiarly fitted for the trans portation of the bulky commodities Jamestown World’s Fair The Wonderful Radius Scientific Diamonds | HIGHEST AWARD GOLD MEDAL ST. LOUIS WORLD'S FAIR. Our entire exhibit which was on display at the Jamestown Worlds Fair has arrived, nnd we have placed the entire le at our store Jn Atlanta, beginning Wednesday. ^ Among the stock are some elegant nnd beautiful designs «»f sti.ek .... BM ... . Jewelry which will he so hi tor the customs duty /done. Cost of merchandise not considered, hrery article must he sold, and for the workmanship alone of these elegant Jewels. ■ and perfect Jewelry hns never been MBPI M ^ ts^ Bog Collars., Qry etc. etc., thet scent to be worth from $10.00 to <200.00 and aetnnllv Worth $$.50 to <9.50. youi- choice, while they lost . for the purpose of quirk sale wp bare cut prices that hardly pay for the workmans NOTHING IS KEHKKVKD. Such a colossal display of brilliant, dazzling, magnificent ; . _ witnessed before. Kings. Broodies. Combs. Cuff Buttons. Earrings. Scurf IMus. Lockets. Bog Collars. Bracelets. Chains, $1.00 TO $4.50 YOU CAN’T AFFORD TO MISS THIS* OPPORTUNITY average man in the ranks has not got which come from the soil or under the the fighting edge. We need the organ Izatlon, the preparation; we need the good general; but we need most the lighting edge in the individual soldier. So It Is In private life. COURAGE AND STRENGTH. “We live in a rough, workaday world and we nre yet a long way from the millennium. We can not as a nation and we can not as Individuals afford to cultivate only the gentler, softer quali ties. There must be gentleness nnd tenderness—the strongest men are gentle nnd tender—but there must also be courage and strength. I have a hearty sympathy wlih those who be lieve in doing all that can be done for THE O UrTo. FLAT BELCHER RING 2-kiirnt stone gentleman's solid gold-filled flat Belcher King. It is impossible to detect this ring from one costing |2M. The stone Is cut the same us a genuine diamond. We guarantee the brilliant* to last for ever. Mounting Is war ranted for 10 years’ con stant wear. Special price, L’lal price, ..$4.50 GENTLEMEN’S STUD OR SCARF PIN Can be used for Imth pur- poses; a very neat nnd popular size; if n genuine diamond would cost you nltout $12.*» or $150. This answers nil purposes at one hundredth part of that. Our special price while J $1.00 'US ENGRAVED BELCHER RING Hnud tnnde. exquisitely en- graved. Large. pure white, perfectly brilliant and sparkling stone, guaran teed to retain Its brillian cy forever. Mountings guaranteed for la yenm— can not be distinguished from genuine worth $125. Our price, while they last . $2.50 & TIFFANY ENGAGE- X MENT RING. £ An exact duplicate of the fj; Tiffany Engagement King. TC Beautiful stone, set In r|5 gold-filled mounting. . We Tfi guarantee this ring to give 3? entire satisfaction. Our <n special price, wbljt Inst $1.00 nr We make It n point to cony rr expensive designs only. 4? Tills ring enn not be tnid •v from ono costing $135. Fully guaranteed. Our X special price for this sale, | mir.: h ? $i.5o Beautiful (Muster King, any color center. . Surrounded with Kiuiliis brilliant stones, every one gun mi- Mounting gold-filled 10 years, prlc teed. while they Inst $4.50 ntly brilliant, pure white stones, perfectly matched, set In extra heavy filled gold. You positively can not distinguish them from the genuine. Our special ns?* mir. $i.oo 1-2-K. FLATBELCHER Can be worn by Indy or geutlemaii. We ore .the first to make a ring of this character In anything but solid gold. We gifanin- tee the mounting for 10 years. Special price, whfie they $1.00 Kndlus Scientific Diamonds nre not paste , other names. cheap Imitation. It la an imported stone, clarified, cut nnd polished ns In cent discovery, ntul Is now universally recognized as the only scientifically per- -GUARANTEE- We guarantee each nnd every Itndlus Diamond sold by us to retain Its brilliancy forever, nml the mount ing to give perfect satisfaction and wear. We will replace any stone which does not give satisfactory wear FREE OF CHARGE. & L NG Is on sale on every news stand in yonr city The wholesome, hopeful, national magazine of the American outdoors. Its articles have the grip of personal experience. Its fiction is the best con temporary American literature. Its facts are accurate and authoritative. Its artistic beauty is unexcelled. The October number contains: THE WAY OF A MAN, by EMERSON HOUOH This serial is generally con ceded to be the greatest novel of the year. THE COUNTRY FAIR, by DAVID LANSING, in which the author recalls the old country fair as it used to be. BALLOONING AND AERIAL NAVIGATION, by F. P. LAHN, U.S.A, being an outline of the immense aid practical air ships could render to science and to nations in war. YARNS OF THE FORWARD DECK, by VANCE THOMPSON; being a bunch of yams unskeined by a congenial party on board an ocean line-. ROUND UP DAYS, by STEWART EDWARD WHITE, will take the reader away from the noise and bustle of the city to the plains. GENERAL ISAAC SHELBY, FIRST GOVERNOR OF KENTUCKY, by LYNN TEW SPRAGUE. One of a aeries of articles retelling American His tory in the form of vivid personal sketches. And a dozen, other features of interest with photographs of a score of divers scenes, supplemented by a liberal pro portion of paintings and drawings. There is no decrying the intensity or the diversity of interest that pervades, not only this but every number of THE OUTING MAGAZINE. 25 cents » copy THE PERFECT MAGAZINE $3.00 a year soil; and no other part of our country Ih um fruitful as la this In such com modities. STAY ON FARM. “You In Iowa have many manufac turing centers, but you remain, and I hope you will always remain, a great* agricultural state. I hope that the DC means of transporting your commodi- — ties to market will be steadily im proved; but this will be of no use un less you keep producing the commodi ties, and In the long run this wil largely depend upon your being able to keep on the farm a high type of citizenship. The effort must be to muke farm life not only remunerative but attractive, so that the beat young men and girls will feel Inclined to stay on tho farm and not to go to the city. “Nothing Is more important to this country than the i»orpetuatlon of our system of medium-sized farms worked by their owners. We do not want to see our farmers sink to the condition of the peasants of the old world, bare ly able to live on their small holdings, nor do we wnnt to see their places ta ken by wealthy men owning enormous estates which they work purely by ten ants and hir.»d servants. FARMER INDEPENDENT. “At present the ordinary* farmer holds Ilia own In the land as against any possible representative of the land lord class of furmer—that is, of the men who would own vast estates—be cause the ordinary farmer unites his capital, his labor, nnd his brains with the making of a permanent family home and *hus can afford to hold his land av a value ut which It can not be held by the capitalist, who would have to run it by leasing it or by cultivating It at arm’s length with hired labor. “Now, from the standpoint of the nation as a whole, it Is pre-eminently desirable to keep as one of our chief American types the farmer, the farm home-maker, of the medium-sized farm. This type of farm home is one of our strongest political and soclul bulwarks. Such a farm worked by the owner has proved by experience the best place In which to breed vigorous leaders alike for country and city. “It Is a matter of prime economic and civic Importance to encourage this type of home-owning fanner. EDUCATE FARMER. “Therefore, we should strive In every way to aid in the' education of the farmer for the farm, and should shape our school system with this end in view; and so vitally Important is this that. In my opinion, the Federal gov ernment should co-operate with the state governments to secure the need ed change and Improvement in our schools. “It is *lgnin*#*» that both from Min nesota and (5t< ig!a there have come proposals in this direction In the ap pearance of bills Introduced Into the national congress. The congressional lard grant act of .2 accomplished much In establish ing the agricultural college* In the several states, nnd, therefore. In pre paring to turn the system of educa tional training for the young into channels at once broader nnd more practicable—ard what I am saying about agricultural training really ap plies to nil industrial training. But the colleges can not reach the masses, and It Is essentia! that the masses should be reached. HELP CHILDREN. Such agricultural hi*h schools as those In Minnesota and Nebraska for farm boys and girls, such technical high school as are to be found, for In stance. In both St. Louis and Washing ton. have by their success shown that It is entirely feasible to .*arry In prac tical fashion the f undo rental* of In dustrial training Into ;he realms of our secondary schools. At present there Is .i gap between our primary schools in v untry and city We have the largest Mall Order Department In the country devoted exclusively to • sale of these Jewels. All orders filled the day they ore received. Bend us currency, or money order l<»r anything you want nnd you will he surprised and delighted with the . nnnrn nv Hill we have the largest Mall Order Deni UKlitH nl MAIL Ml ° of Jewels. All orders filled UI1UL.II LI I mnil. njQijp, order /or anything you want a . _ article you receive. The Illustration or description hardly do the goods Justice. ADDRE8S ALL ORDERS DISTINCTLY, RADIUS JEWELRY CO., 83 PEACHTREE STREET RADIUS JEWELRY CO., 83 STORE OPEN EVENINGS. PEACHTREE ST. ATLANTA, GA. ^BEBKHIKIOIOKi: Monday, Oct 7th. JACKSON AND IRWIN STREETS. AMERICA’S OWN AND ONLY Real Representative Exhibition Led In Person by the Hero Horseman COL.. W. R. CODY, “Buffalo Bill** Rain or Shine, * All Nations. nnd the Industrial college courses, which must be closed, and. If necessa ry, the nation must help the state to close It. TRAIN CHILDREN. “Specific training of a practical kind should be given to tho boys and girls who. when men and women are to make up the backbone of this nation by working In agriculture. In the mechan ical Industries, In arts and trades; In short, who are to do the duty that should always come first with all of us, the duty of home-making and home keeping. “Our country offers unparalleled op portunities for domestic and social ad vancement, for social and economic leadership In the world. Our greatest national asset is to be found In the children. MODIFY LAND LAWS. “Now, men of Iowa, I want to say Just a word on a matter thnt concerns not the states of the Mississippi valley itself, but the states west of them, the states of the great plains and the Rocky mountains. FAVOR 8ETTLER. “The one object In all our land laws e Mould always be to favor the actual settler, the actual home-maker, who comes to dwell on the land and there to bring up his children to Inherit It after him. No temporary prosperity of any Mryirifiiue Real Routli.Ki.bn from class of men could In the slightest de- ? Aliythe LandMontosuma. gree atone for failure on our part to CPfiPITQ The Sturdy Westerners Who shape the laws so that they may work OwvVIg Biased the Pioneers’ Trail. maker.” permanent good of the home- 1 ^HD-WEST G|RU2^ B *h2S3E! the land laws affecting the lands oithe PLAINSMEN MV’ay r 6ut°w2c ?ry West and tt modification that would be _ r _ , . attractive to the .mall herder and LANCERS PiBcJu TUSSlimTau” rancher. He closed hy saying that he ft S»T!I 9 CDV Krill, and Inhibit, ol oulil do all within his porfer to secure -vrt I Ji.Lc.KY ow-timoTsetS. affected might think was just* and VACQUER0S Hex iean* Cowboy. "" ; JAPAN ESE susias M -” plains in war-paint. COWBOYS KiKS 5 ""' flCyQDO Swarthy Bedouin Athletes and nitnDQ Desert-Horn Acrobat*. SOLDIERS Scenes and Incuieots. COSSACKS off Kuanian hteppes. Comar to Attend Fair. Special to The Georgian. Huntsville, Ala., Oct. I.—The Tennes see Valley Fair opened today and will continue throughout the week. Gov ernor Comer and staff will be g the fair association on Friday. ■“Crack .Shot” Johnnie Baker. MURESCO We carry all shades In packages and In bulk. GEORGIA PAINT & GLASS CO* 40 Peachtree Street Pcrfcctijn In Rapid Drills AUUWVLO* and Manual of Arms. “Unde Sam's’* Horn The Prido of the Army. j DRAGOONS Own Defenders.'* * *** I TWO PERFORMANCES DAILY-Rato or Shine. ■. Admission .50 cents. Children utBler 10 years, tetir 10 Gunter-Watkins Drug Co., Peschtree and Walton streets, for grand •stand only. Priee $1.00 including admission. GRAND Tonight—Matinee Today. WILTON LACKAYE BONDMAN As presented for one year at Drury * London. Wednesday and Thursday—Oct 2-3. MATINEE THURSDAY. Martin & Emery’s Production of Richard Wagner’s Festival Play “PARSIFAL” (In English) Superb Company—Elaborate Produc tion-Night 25c to $1.50—Matinee 25c to $1.00—Curtain at 7i45 and 2 p. m. Friday and Saturday—Matinee Satur- day. Joe Weberia Production o, tho Effer vescent Muilcal Comedy 'Dream City’ With LITTLE CHIP, MARY MARBLE and a Company of 60. 8pacial Attraction. MMe. LILLIAN BLAUVELT. ™e BIJOU THIS WEEK: Matinees Tuesday, Thursday and Sat urday. The New Musical Comedy Drama “The Candy Kid” With RAY RAYMOND And 20 Others. Next Week; CHARLEY GRAPEWIN. TEETH EXTRACTED positively without puin, foe mrli. fie.C troth If. Moor, ..a eot buy better.. I'll 11. A D K L I'll IA riKXTAI. ItUUM*. ,\o. a wottau.il at. High-Class Vaudeville. Mr amf Mrs. Gena Hughes, Hoey and Lea, The Vald- ! Inge, Beaumont’s Pony Circus and Four Other Big Acta. Every act a feature t every feature a hit. Night Prices, 15 to 50 cents; matinees. 10 and 25 cent*, any tlenlars seat PB&K I teat in houta. Uptown ticket office, anM.WOOttXV.U. O 1 Kimball News 8tand. Telephones, OfficelMM.mrwMnsfc Ball, 3145; Atlanta; 1704. 77 Peachtree Street, THI8 WEEK’S BILL. S. E. Richards & Co., Magic and Il lusions; Hary Howard, Fresh From Broadway; J. C. Murphy, $1,000 Chal lenge Bono Rattler; Miss Edna Morlsy, Illustrated 8ongs. SOUTH SICE THEATER 44 East Huntsr Street. Prices 10e and 2Ce—Opens Tonight Harrison, Weet A Harrison, Featur ing La Pstite Harrison; Prof. Willis* Lightning Crayon Artist; Aitken A Son, Comedy Acrobats; Carl A Carl, "20th Century Tramps;’’ Mis Carl, Illustrated 8ongs; Vitascopc.