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THE ATLANTA GEORGIAN’ AND NEWS: FRIDAY, NOVEMBER 25, 1010.
THE ATLANTA GEORfilAN
(AND NEWS)
F..L. SEr.LY. DuMUWr.
EDWIN OAMr. Mv;i«:n< Editor.
FuMiibtd Er.ry Aftomooo
(Eic.pt »«*»>■)
Sy THE GEORGIAN COMTiWY^
At to E..I Ale»a®a-G" Atliatt. vnl -_
SUBSCRIPTION RATES: #
One Year t,ao
Six Mouths ‘ 1.06
J. It. Pahacr. Ferslge T J? ,e U"*,5l5i
ronnl.tln. Aldr.M csre Tlio Q«°rft*».
Ati.nt., G»
If you h*»# aay treabl* ***fta* TJ*
0-o.gtsn and Nr*». lalsghaM. *h*jjKn,
lotion department and ban I'
irraadhA Both phon.. SPSS-
SubMtrlbon iHlring Th. 0»r«J.n
.v«*a dfeoMtlaood Mil eotlly * h 'o,,,.
Sc. an the data of ..ttiratlon. ot»n
wl.a It will ha contlna.d at th. w'j
iah«cr1ptlon rates «ntll notlo* *• itop
M Jn ordoriujf a cbanta of ,Mr ".'i r 5 1 .‘ 1 IH
tin th. old a. well aa th. n«* addrMt. _
it fa daatroiT(hat *11 coauUhUlJ^y
lrl.nd.-l for pnMIcstlcj In Tha Ooo
tf.n aid Now. b. llmlt-d to SCO word. In
Intth. It I. Imprratira tb.t
•lan.d. aa »n sTlJmce of good fslth.
Jested mannaorfot. will ■bot ‘o ”torr , d
uni... .lamp, are .ant for the pnrp°”;_^
Th. daorettn adif HaV. ortft* no *"•
eTean or objectionable »dv#rH*Jtir «*»•
t«r. ffalthrr doa. it'print trhlakp or
nr hnmt Ma
O then front aoarea of troth and fcaowl-
#lg., w» ramninhar before tbaa the writer.
• r booh., th. n«w«p»p«r mm. and «H who.o
r.111 at It is to gather and winnow fact, and
to Inform the peopl#. Grant them a d.ter-
ailn.d tore for hon.tt wort and a .tannob
hatred for the making of Ilea. In. they P«r-
vart the Jndgmmt of onr nation end Laeh
t< to call light derkntn and darknot. light.
S.ff.r them not- to drag the mind of onr
pooplo with faltahood and prejndtea. Since
the sanity end wisdom of e nation art In
thotr charge, may they oonnt It ahamo ta sat
th# baser paarlon. of men on flra for the
a.ko of gain.
Grant them holdnaaa to taro tho nnweloomo
light on theta who loro the dartat.M haeanio
fh.lr do.da era aril Fat Into thotr hindi
tho shining (word or troth, and make them
worthy eon. of tho ehamplona of the people
In the put who held troth ta be a holy thing
for which am ohonld dim Make them reellta
that they hero a pobllc Inaction ta the com.
aonwealth. and that tbrtr country may ha
eared by their oonr.go aad nndone by thotr
rowudlco and aOmco.
Grant them the hurt of manhood to cut
their mighty infnoaco with tho forcoa which
make tho pooplo otrong end free, and If they
filler Ion. may they rejoice In that aa proof
fa their own aonlo that they. too. hero hero
friend, of the common n.a and .arrant* of
the higher lew.—Walter Ramchmbnsch, In
Th. Aamtcsn Staguln..
HER LETTER.
I'm fitting alone by the fire.
Oraeeed Juet ae I came from the dence,
In a robe even you would admire—
It coat a cool thouaand In France;
l‘m be-diamondtd out of elt reaaon.
My hair la don* up In n cue:
•In abort, air, "the belle of the teaeon"
la waiting an heur on you.
“And how do I Ilka my poaltlon?
And whet do I think of New York?
And now, In my higher ambition,
With whom do I waltr, flirt, or talk!
And Isn't It nice te have riches,
And diamond, and alike and all that?
And len’t It a changa to the ditch..
And tunnel, of Poverty Flatt” |
Wall, yea—If you eaw ue out driving
Each day In tha park, four-ln-hand—
If yau aaw poor dtar mamma contriving
To leek euperneturally grand—
If you saw pap.'a plctura. aa taken
By Brady, end tinted at that—
You'd never su.pect he sold bacon
And flour at Poverty Flat.
And yat, Just thla momant, when Bitting
In the glarp of the grand chandelier—
In tha buatle and gllttar befitting
. The ''flne.t soiree of the year''—
In the miets ef a gaaa da Chambary,
And tha hum ef tha emallut of talk—
Somehow. Joe, I thought of the "Ferry,"
And the dence that we had en "The
Fork;"
Of Harrison's barn. with Its mutter
Of flags fettooned over the well:
Of the candles that ahed their soft luster
And tallow on head-drcee end shawl;
Of the steps that we took te one fiddle,
Of the drees of my quopr vla-a-vl*.
And how I oncp want down tha mlddlt
With the man that shot Sandy McGee;
Of thp mean that was quietly sleeping
On the hill when the time came to go;
Of tho few baby peak* that ware peeping
From under thalr bedclothes of anowi
Of that ride—that to mo was tho rareat;
Of—tha something you aaid at tho gate:
Ah, Joel than I wasn’t an halrtaa
To “the boot-paying laad In tha stats."
But. goodness! what nonaanst I’m writ
ing!
(Mamma aaya my taata still la low)
instead ef my triumphs reciting,
I’m spooning on Joseph—hslgh-ho!
And I’m to be "finished” by travel—
Whatever', the meaning of that—
Oh! why did papa strike pay gravel
In drifting en Poverty Flat?
Good-night— here’s tha and of my paper:
Oood-night—If the longitude please—
Far maybe, while westing my taper,
Yeur eun'a climbing ever the tress.
But know. If you haven't got rlchos.
And are poor, daarest Joa. and all that.
That my haart's somewhtra there In the
ditches.
And yeu'vo struck It—on Poverty Flat.
— Bret Herte.
If President IXus hasn't suppressed
site rebel*, hr ha* «i least suppressed
rebellious news.
II didn't require lui'h a grand effort
to raise that grand nprni fund. It
• am* nuU-kly ant from willing hernia
The day bnlore Thanksgiving day
t.W ■-oupteB were married in Chicago.
Wondyr how mans of th»*e couples
will celebrate neat Thauksglvtqg in
Reno*
Consnmers bear rate burdens.' The
consumer I* tho burden bearer of mod
em commerce Every once In h while
somebody dlseoeer* another one for
him to bear.
I The By-Products of a Plague.
The boll weevil conference called By tho Atlanta Chamber
of Commerce ban come and none, hut not without leaving it*
mark mid without nutting in operation forces nnd influences
that will be felt in Georgia for years to come.
A plugue hat. fallen upon the cotton fields—upon those
I fields that produce the one most important crop of the United
-States and that insure the commercial stability and suprema
cy of the South.
Tho plague of the boll weevils is spreading. It-can not
he stopped. Wherever cotton grows there it will some day be.
Its presence can not be avoided, therefore it must bo ren
dered harmless!, but howl
Dr. S, A. Knapp, of the United States dipartment of agri
culture, the greatest boll weevil authority, gave the answer in
his speech before the Atlanta conference.
“The battle against, the weevil is in two division*,” he
said. “The first division of the work consists in reducing the
number of weevils just as much as possible, so that a crop can
be made.' Tho second division is 1»> push the cotton plant to
matnrity aa fast aa possible and BY EXTRA CDLTIVATION
AND FERTILIZATION cause it to put on more forms or
squares than it can mature, *9 that what the weovil tBkes is
only a surplus—of no consideration in making the crop.”
In other words, better cotton must be raised and by bet
ter methods of farming. i -
Too long has the cultivation of cotton been carried on by
the old, wasteful methods. . Too much land has been cultivated,
.and too'much labor expended for the results secured. The cost
of production has been too high. Diversified and intensified
farming in the South lias heretofore seemed impossible.
Now the plague of the weevils will compel it, because
•without it cotton' can not- he raised at all. The presence of the
weevil, therefore, is uot on unmixed evil,- because ultimately it
menus a new agriculture in the South, to the like of which
thefwd will be in no wise’ comparable.
‘ The fight, against the weevil iu past, years by tho United
States department of agriculture is what *moro than anything
. else served to evolve the department’s demonstration work for
fanners that has found such a wide field for usefulness. And
' tills work in turn evolved the Boys’ and Girls’ Farm Life
dubs that today aro making over rural existence North and
South.
The plague of the, weevils produces directly devastation
■and waste, but its by-pi'oducts, thanbs to man's ingenuity, are
benefits and blessings. • ’
NEVER AGAIN! BvT.E. Powers
Giving Offenders a New Start,
The dirst meeting of Oie parole board for the Atlanta Fed-,
erul prison, which will take place in a few days, will mark "*
departure in previous methods of handling Federal convicts.
The law creating the board was passed by congress last
summer, and provides that prisoners who have served one-third .
of their term and whose conduct has been good may apply for
11 parole. < ■
The chief feature of the parole, however, is that it will ba
granted in no case to able-bodied prisoners until employment *
has been found for them, after which the.' - are still to he under
the care and supervision of the prison authorities until the ex
piration of their sentences.
This step is in accordance with the best, of motjern thought
on the subject of penology, which lays emphasis on the reform
of the prisoner rather than on the punishment feature of his
imprisonment.
The released convict has always been a problem to the state,
and if this problem is not met in a sane, humane way it will
harm both tho Plan and the state.
Reformation of a prisoner begins with the return of his
self-respect, and for assisting this return nothing is better
than that, tho prisoner should find honest employment on his
release. The activity which such employment gives, the oeeu-
| pal ion of mind, the consciousness of the ability to earn money
slid be self-supporting, nil contribute effectively to his reha
bilitation. '
The Federal government's new system of'parole and sub
sequent supervision lias been dssigned 011 practical lines, and
is surrounded by n number of precautionary restrictions. The
results, when it in put into practical operation, will be watched
with interest.
MM
I AROUND AND ABOUT GEORGIA
u
Bast Tift at LeatL
%\> wore ashamed of tha showing
mads hr our people In tha election t**t
Tuesday, but whan wa saw Hie ratumt
from our neighboring counties the com
parison was In our favor. Tift county
only, polled 14S rota*.—Worth County
Local.
Worthy of Thought. '
Girls. get your thinking cap on, for
1 hoard u certain young man *ay he
was tired of going to era tha girls and
tr accomplish anything. He said he
wna going t» propose to them-all until 1
ha gats ona In the same notion he la In.
Cor. Marlon County Patriot.
What Newspaper la Not.
A newspaper Is In no genso a special
child of charity. It com* twice over
ovary dollar It receives and It ta second
to no enterprise In contributing to the
upbuilding of a community. Its patrons
reap far more benailts from Ita pages
than Its publisher*, and In calling for
th» support of tha community In which
It Is published It asks for no more
than In all fairness belongs td It. tho
generally It receives las*. Patronise
snd holp your paper as you would any
other enterprise because It helps you.
mid not aa an act of charity.—Richland
Georgian.
Bast Motto.
Rev. J. W. Lae, tho noted Georgia
preacher, recently appointed to a Meth
odist pulpit . In BL Louis, sake The
Georgian for a atatemont of tho work
ing of the Georgia prohibition law.
The law Is shown to be reasonably wall
•nforced, even In our more populous
center*. The Smith la now, aa never
before, an empire of busy people, and
every man In this prosperous age who
would succeed has learned that total
abstinence must lie the motto.—Hamil
ton Journal.
Burned Wrong Ares.
The rainy season last summer hay
caused one of our boys *t Sowhatche#
to lose his potato patch—thnt Is, the
exact spot where he planted. Tha lux
urious growth of grass completely cov
ered everything to aucli a depth aa to
keep him from finding any sign of th*
original patch. However, he decided to
burn It-off—but w hat would ha do with
f 0 m*ny rousted potatoes on hi* hands
Veil. Luke thought he, would divide
with hla neighbor*, no |i# throw thu tiro
tn and after all found out that he
missed the patch by IIO or 40 yards. Joa
Ritchie ought not to have told that op
Luke.—Cor. Early County News.
Respect For Law.
The hope of the country Is reaped
for the law. Take the law from th*
courts and place It Into th* hands of
the mob. and even th* pillows we sleep
on will loss with our uneasiness. In
God's name, let ua respect th* law and
th* courts nnd protect and defend them
as th* daaroat of our blood-bought
rights.—Macon County Cltlxen.
Cut It Out!
There are some peopl*
mighty careless about throwing paper*
British Justice—swift, sure, aw
There are no better deterrents of crime
Ilian aro these qualities of the admin
istration of criminal law.
The population of New York slate
according to the I event census, will
glee It nine new congressmen. As
moat of the Incivoe-' of population has
ii»e n in New York city, the majority
"f th* new memb-'r* will likely he
r-M-.-Ta»r
Thanksgiving.
Our people generally hare much to
be thankful for during th# Thanksgiv
ing season. At one time It appeared as
If the crops In thla aeetlon would he
ulmoet ruined, but they came out won-
dsrfully and the price* for *11 kind* of
products hav* li**n good. Condition,
aro much better than w# could hop* for
at on* time and the Almighty h**
showered His blessing* upon u*. Grati
tude should well up In the hearts of *11/
—Adel New*.
Emulate Dally Pres*.
The weather bureau should ainulat*
tho exactness*of the dally proas. Th*
pap*rv gave notice of a total eclipse of
tho moon to occur at t o'clock Wednes
day evening, and. by heck. It ahowad
up at ilie proper time.—Camilla En
terprise.
What Did It.
Many a girt never lihds out until it
Is too late that It nas her father’s
financial rating rather thsn herself that
brought on the proposal.—RerpeavUle
K.>..()w.'<*
who are
■Hhim
on the streets. They Mow from place
to plac* and It I* Impossible to keep
th* town clean If peopl* will persist la
such practice*—Carnesvtll* Advsnre.
A Littla Fergatfulnits. -
Xlierlff Black Is minus some ttiv
b«o*u*# of a little forgetfulness on his
port He had several hundred dpllur*
In Ids puree, which he placed under his
Pillow a few night* gan, and when h*
got up next morning he
Place the puree In his 1
In th* day he missed the purs* and
wym to his home to get It. He ttrst
lurked the negro housewnmnn if she
jliad seen It. and she replied. "Ye*. It is
rmt your bod where you left It." On
counting th# money over, how ever, aft.
*r securing the puis*, the ahoritt found
It shy Iffi). II* ha* had th* woman
Jailed On otispld.m of having taken th*
missing mono)', hut up to non she ha*
not confessed to having taken It —
Early County N*w».
Stats Help Advectted.
The proposition far th* sttt* legit
Itture to provide aid for an annual
state fair at Marou has strong lnd«r*e.
ni'nt from all clgaaes of people through
out tin' state. A* these annual fairs
benefit the entire state. It scent* right
that the entire suite should hear a part
of the expanse. The state could legally
und Justly construct a permanent ex
hibition building, thus giving all the
taxpayer* a flnanctal Interest In tha
annual fair*.—Parry Home Journal.
May Net B* Bast.
Whan a* com* to think about IL w*
*r* not certain that a Democratic vic
tory In the "off year*" I* the best thing
for the i-srty. We would much rather
see tfie storm strike the Republican*
In presidential years. ,-V*ldosta Time*
Daily Health Chat
BY AN ATLANTA PHYSICIAN.
“HEALTH” JIAGAZINE.S.'
The agencies moat entirely antagonise,
to the rhyelcal wt|-belng of th* free.hoi
American today may bo classified im.uH
four great evils, namely: The eaten,
medicine evil, the fake healer and nuarl
doctor evil, the incompetent "ethical
Pli>'»l*i«» evil and the fake health titer-,
lure evil. It would be difficult to deebi,
tvblch of these four forces Is most tnlmi.
cable to the public weal, but tha write,
Is Inclined to believe that the two Ua
named are n/oit harmful because mo?
Insidious. Only the foolish will sw.ii,,,
the preposterous claims of the bare.(a.J
charlatan, and we have enough of th]
foolish to spare a few to the quacks- hj
who Is wise enough to distinguish alwsn
between the competent and tha m-/-
petent physician? And what layman .nl 1
not he taken In now and then by devest
written tho woefully, unreliable err
memo optima vaccination, against dr‘«
In any and all cases, against proper anlms
diet and against the competent rh
U 2S‘ h « current Issue SfT’wTddy SI,
i headAch*. it tayti, *'|f your iHmentui-'
: f^fts^rcaMon'Iri!!. ™
.‘"dlgaathV derangement’ n*
Tat every one. must realise upon ,
moment's reflection that neuralgic he,H
ache of the most violent and per.listen
type often accompxnjea * food*nr*>ffJ
perfect digestion. If J7auC
the Infallible treatment should comen,
; that neuralgia Is dependent upon prevlo
derangement of digestion and nerve n„
trltlon. what will he do wltS the „e,.m
! gle headaches of malaria? Also wh.
, will h* do with th* severe headaches do,
«0 Uterine condition.? And with "he «
: flex headache caused by Inflammation ..
| the bladder? Than, there Is tn* her lad
! dua to eye-ttral -. the headache that pre
cede* pneumonis and other Infectious dir
j»#e*. and that prince of all head rilni
' the nitroglycerin head."
But thla misconception concerning th
origin of headache Is harmless i“d,
compared with the following advlc .
part of tha treatment for acute attack
or headache complicated by ''biliousness
gay* our "Infallible'' therapeutist: To
der such circumstances ft I* well 1
•Irens* the stomach at th* earliest po,
slid* moment. This can ba accomplish,
best by drinking a largo quantity of to
I water—from one to two quarts, ** f.,
■ vs possible. The water should h* as t„
1* Is possible for one to take ft and l
tide to drink tt down without sipping
Any ono Who Is acquainted with the fir,
, principles of physiology ought 1., kuo-
1 that the rapid Ingestion of two quarts *
: water Is a crime against nature, « era
likely to result In chronic dUliation of
Stomach and gastric ptoal
ss aging of the most abus
UNCLE WALT * PHILOSOPHER
Don't talk about the prize you’ll win, or how you trill
pursue it. for hoaslu are like the clnnl: of tin: don't 'fulls—jrct
down and do it. Don't nay you’ll fill tin* lQiblta out Unit make
. your friends uneasy; just. lurn your eondutl- face
A FEW about—for talk is cheap and wheezy. About your
seedy elothes don’t talk, nud say you’ll soon be tony;
DON’TS go not the sort of dtulg that kuoek—for promises are
- ’ ' foi
phongy.
lie
Don't make some wild and foolish break
and then ^tcff people’s pardon; such conduct tnakfs them fair
ly ache to plant you in the garden. Don’t try to tell u funny
tale fo friend* who may be busy, oh they will say you’d be in
jail if peeler* were not dizzy. Don’t talk about, yo'ur own eon-
cenin to ono who’s in a hurry; he doesn’t rare three' tinkers’
dern* about your woe and worry.; Don’t blow a damp, hang.-,
over breath *into your neigh hors', faces, or they will wish that.
Colonel Deatli would take you where his pluee is. Don’t talk,
unleis the thing you’d say is truly worth the trouble; for
work’s the stuff that puts up hay, nnd talk is but a bubble.
WALT MASON.
Copyright, wo, hy «ieorf»s Matthew Ada tna.
TOLSTOI---A GREAT REBEL
Tolstoi was th* twentieth century's
great rob#I—a rebri In literature. »
r*b*l In politics, * rebel In religion, a
rebel tn ethics, a rebel in economies, hi*
hand raised against every human Insti
tution and ever}’ convention that out
raged Ida reason or hi* conscience. H*
was th* untvoreal Luther, always read}'
to nail his thesis to the door and say:
"Here I stand: I can not do otherwise;
God help me."
To have written "Anna Karenina"
gnd "War and Peac*’’ la to be num
bered among the Immortal*: but a Mill
higher immortality' than anything lit
erature has to bring belongs to the man
Who could dafy the Russian autocracy,
who could defi- th* Holy Synod, who
could dafy all the maimer*, custom*
and laws of his cast*, and set his foot
upon tho neck of all governmental and
ecclesiastical authority the nrhtle ha
gave his mcastge to tne world.
To b* sure, It was a weird and Inco
herent message. Most of the Tolstoi
theories were fantastic and Impossible.
Not «r outside of a mad house tvus there
such illogical logic. No government
could exist under Tolstoi’s notion of
government. Religion would ceoee to
h* religion. No nation of Tolstois
could survive under the code uf Tolstoi.
Clvlllxatlun would disappear Into the
eternal 'twilight. Human society Itself
would crumble and vanish.
Hut great rebel* kre not to be token
literally or followed blindly. Their
function 1s to shake mankind out of Its
lethargy nnd to lay Impious hands upon
all the Idols that mankind has come to
worship. They seldom find the truth
themselves, but because of them other
men find It *nd know It and prove If.
John Brown's body Ilea a-molderlng In
th* grave, but his sould goes marching
on; and because tt goes marching on,
the shackle* are struck from million*
of slaves.
There Is no writer who could not de
molish Tolstoi's theories of literature.
There ls no doctor of divinity who could
not crumple up hi* notions of religion
and theology. There Is no bureau
crat who could not demonstrate the fu
tility of hla notions of government.
There Is no economist who could not
prove that Tolstoi was without a fun
damental notion of any system of cro
ne mica. There Is no sociologist who
could not prove that the Tolstoi theo
ries were th* very negation of aoclaty.
Yet for all that. Tolstoi stands as on#
of the commanding figures of modern
time*, and hi. generation must say of
him as Napoleon said of (loath*:
"There I* a man."—Now York World.
drive tho Ghetto out of the minds of
the country, gentlemen. He was re
galed with a host of nicknames from
every quarter Indicative of ptystery
und legerdemain. Yet after sumo five
and thirty years i>f It a huge majority
of English voters at last hglled him for
flrst minister. The strange riddle
stand* over.
Meanwhile, we do not forget that
one who begun his egyeer by so much
literary extravagance us the present
volume recalls, yet-when he cam* to
the groat business of hi* life, tho crea
tion und working of a powerful politi
cal party, showed himself cool, shrewd,
putlent, far-sighted, practical, full of
tactical resource, a consummate mus
ter at the fatiguing art of managing
men. and those, too. tho kInti of iii<n .to
whom h* w»* not by race only, but by
temperamrnt and the deapnt habits of
hi* mind a chartered alien. He grow
larger, and not,last, as tipi* went on.
even down to the days of disaster nnd
overthrow in 1880. Those who were In
confidential relations with him at that
baleful hour have recorded, ns tha
present writer ha* *»ld rlsswhere, how
the fallen minister, .who had counted
on a vary different result, faced tjie
ruin of his government, th* *nd of hla
rareer and th* overwhelming triumph
of Ills antagonist with an uncloudsd
serenity and a greatness of mind
worthy of u man who had known high
fortunes and filled to the full the meas
ure of his gifts and his ambitions.—
John Morlfy In London Times.
the danger i
For. In addition
lion of
the stomach-
in another current health publican.
this question and answer appear: "Wh.
la th* bast diet for articulation rheums
tlsni? Answer: In severe cases the be
diet Is nothing at all but air and vtu
until rellaf comes, oven If that be ti
days." Belief would be more than Ilk.
to com* In less than ten days, perfect
lief In th* form of death. Ten day. »
out food is the msxlmum limit of endu
unca for tho average healthy Indlvidtn
according to th* beat authorities. Hippo,
rates, the father of medicine and of II
law which says that tho healer's first dt
Is tn assist nature, put tha limit at
' ’Afanothor place In thl* same raagaili
wo nnd the following brand new Ilf
of titrating kldn.
nco of floating >'
largely due to 111
upon tlm etiology
... .
ay of holding up the stocking* —by It*
ipporter* attached to the coraet.
And so it goes. The foregoing extrsc
were made at random, and many nr
could i— found every month In the y«
When will I'ncle Bam take a hand? It
nirinu* literature Is worse than Impti
food and drugs.
WHY NOT STOPOVERS?
Editor Th* Georgian:
Well, well, well! That Is an a»;f
good ad of yours, the envelope wM<
contains the blotter. Of mturK ll
blotter I* all light, but that nnvelo;
ls a daisy. But Just like you. Alw*
something new and pews. "Notm'
surceods likc The Georgian.'
Now, old man, get The Georgian
work oik the stopover privilege, TI
railroads should certainly giant us <•“
little that W« ask. .Hurrah for 1
Half-Million CIl}’: W* will hare l r
much quicker If th# railroads will l
us the stopover. Now IT you think 1
merchants, manufacturer*, real ci.J
men, hotel men. laboring mm tr
avory other man who |s Inicrcstcd
the Half-Million City is right, w|
say you. Governor Brown? "hat •
you. Mayor Maddox? H'hut say }dj
President Puxon? What »»)' |
Beely. for the Half-Million (’Its
.Vary truly your*. ■
HARRY L. BCHLESIXOCTJ
Atlanta, Go.
GLADSTONE AND DISRAELI
It is t curious thing that the adora
tion of political England should all this
time have beau divided, the not In
equal proportions, between two Illus
trious men. and governed first by one
snd thsti the other of them, neither of
whom she more than half understood . . - -
or oven pretended to turtarotand. Palm- m Ju , t %i
but Catholic, aad amid Mi hla vicissi
tude* wo* ever th* moat devoted son of
the Church of England. Yet lie wag
the Idol of Protestant ultras, the polit
ical hero of Hcotrlt Presbyterians and
English Independents, not to name the
small but ardent band of Rationalists,
some of whom were Ids stoutest
eretnn, for Instance, eras one of tha
most plain headed men that ever be
came prime minister. In his two Stic-
co*SOTS political fortune brought ex
traordinary paradox.' Mr. Gladstone,
from th* day when ft* resigned about
Maynootb. offered to his most ardent
friends endless puxxlet. He would have
.royncl to call himself by any earne
st range. Mr. Gladatiin* used to tell
how one clay sitting on the bench whllt
Disraeli woo making a strenuous speech
for the removal of Jewish disabilities
I*ord John Russell whtsiifred. "Look at
the fellow, how manfully he sticks to
It. tho he knows that every word he
says Is gall and wormwood to every
man who sits arouhd him and behind
Wm' ' It', took him a generation ‘to
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