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THE ATLANTA GEORGIAN AND NEWS: TUESDAY, AUGUST 1, 1STIJ.
Rnlwrf is *»<-onff-elass ni»tter »t th*
pnst office at Atlanta. Ga.. under the act
of March 1. 1819.
THE ATLANTA GEORGIAN
(AND NEWS)
r. L. SEELY. publisher.
EDWIN CAMP, Managing Editor.
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OAPFODILS.
I wandered lonely aa a cloud
That floala on high o’or valaa and hllle.
When all at once I aaw a crowd.
A hoet. of guidon daffodllet
Bealde tho lake, beneath tha traaa,
Fluttering and dancing In tha braeia.
Continuous aa the stars that ahlna
And twinkle on tha milky way,
They stretched In never-ending line
Along the margin of a bay:
Tan thousand aaw I at a al*nc*>
Telling their heads In sprightly dance.
Hie waves bealde them dance, hut they
Outdid the cparkllng wavet In gla«:
A poet could not but ba gay
In such a Jocund company!
gaied—and gaiad—but little thought
What wealth tha show to mo had brought!
'or ott whan on my couch I lla
In vacant or In pensive mood,
•hey flaah upon tha* Inward ays
Which la tha biles ot solitude,
;nd then my heart with pleasure Itlls,
k nd dance, with th*
the Difficulties
of a Fair Bargain.
Everybody in the United
States is familiar with the de
tails of the long fight to secure
the ratification of tjie Canadian
reciprocity agreement in thia
country, of the arguments that
were brought against it, and of
the delays that were sought to be
interposed.
It wiw contended that the bar-
Bain entered into by the leaders
of the two nations gave all the
advantage to Canada, while the
United States would be grievous
ly mulcted. When this eonten-
tion was shown to be totally
without foundation, then began
the efforts to defeat the meas
ure by parliamenary delay and
the tacking on of amendments.
All such efforts, however,
tailed, and the bill was fully and
Snally adopted by the United
Statee.
The fight now begins in Cana
ls, and the same old tactics are
jeing used there. But Premier
Wilfrid Lanrier has forestalled
roy indefinite parliamentary fili-
watering on the part of the op
position and the danger of fin-
angling and, retarding amend-
nents by dissolving parliament
ind submitting the agreement, as
xamed by the two countries and
>asscd by the United States con
crete, to a vote of the Canadian
leople, which will take place
September 21.
In this respect the Canadian
nethod is more direct than ours.
)ur representatives spend months
laranguing over what pfiblic
lentiracnt is on any, particular
juestion: the Canadian represen-
ativea adjourn, hold an election,
ind find out what that sentiment
s beyond all question and be-
fond all cavil.
The opposition in Canada is
:elling the people that the United
States gets the best of the bar
gain and Canada is the sufferer,
ind further adds the picturesque
usertion that the whole thing is
iust a scheme anyway on the
fiBrt of the United States to au-
jex Canada.
But the masses of the people of
(loth countries long ago recog
nized that the bargain is unfnir
lo neither country, hut that it is
a just one, containing mutual
benefits of the highest impor
tance.
“This agreement,” says Pre
mier Laurier in opening the
campaign for reciprocity, “was
strenuously resisted in the United
States by various interests, on
the alleged ground that it was
all to the advantage of Canada
and to the detriment of the other
country, but the view that it was
mutn«lly advantageous to both
countries finally prevailed in con
gress, and the agreement stands
today as an offer by the United
States to Canada of that very
measure of reciprocity which for
more thnn forty years has en
gaged. the earnest and constant
efforts of every leading Canadian
statesman.”
A just bargain may 'sometimes
have more difficulties to heaet its
path than an unjust one. but, like
justice itself, it will undoubtedly
triumph in the end.
A Coup That
Didn’t Cop.
With a hurrying of warships
and a show of military maneu
vers, Germany attempted to exe
cute a coup in Morocco and come
out with large enhancement of its
territorial possessions and con
trol in northwest Africa. This it
hoped to do notwithstanding the
opposing interests of other na
tions, particularly of Franep.
Europe was set by the ears
with rumors of wars until Eng
land, the leading power in the
Franco-English coalition, an
nounced that no armed territo
rial aggressions on the part of
Germany would he permitted in
Morocco.
Then German military and na
val activities ceased, and there
came advices from Berlin that
the aggressive attitude of Ger.
many would be modified and that
the disturbing Moroccan question
would likely be settled thru regu
lar diplomatic channels.
A bluff called” is the verdict
of the world upon the affair and
the turn it has taken.
But the more interesting ques
tion is what lay behind the bluff
what is -the policy Emperor
William has up his sleeve, of
which the recent happenings
were merely manifestations.
One view hBs it that the bluff
was made for the purpose of
being called, and that Germany
was playing the part of demand
ing a great deal more than it ex
pected to get, so that it might
get all the easier what it did
expect—a custom not unknown
in legal controversies and claims
for damages. And it is predict
ed that in the diplomatic game
that is now to'take place Ger
many will get about , what it
wanted after all.*
Thia view is easy of acceptance
when it is remembered that Em
peror William is one of the
ablest and shrewdest monarch* of
the world Bnd that dreams of
conquest and of the enlargement
of German territory nnd German
importance in the affairs of the
world are continually seething in
his brain. What Germany will
do in any particular ease has for
years been one of the disturbing
problems of European diploraaey.
In another age the German em
peror might have been a Caesar
or a Napoleon. But advancing
civilization has forever made
their like impossible. They stood
for waste and slaughter and for
the glorification of the govern
ment at the expense of the lives
and happiness of the people.
Today the people rule and not
emperors and warriors, and in
all lands the voice of the people
is against war: and.that is why
the present bluff, whatever it
may have concealed, was called
so easily.
It It now tip to*th* fanedlsn pnrlls
msnt to enact the reciprocity agree
ment. We had trouble enough getting
It passed and this trouble we now cor
dially reciprocate with ranada.
Tail, It la aald, will veto all further
tariff revision. Thle looks a hit selflah.
He cinched hla little plan of revision In
the passage of the reciprocity hill and
now wants to ahut down on every body
elae's.
The second battle of Juarrx has
taken place- this time between the po
lice nurhnrltles of the Mexican city and
some of the tnsurrectos. It all grew
oitt of a street corner argument. It
serme .difficult for Mexicans to avoid
abusing Ihvlr recently acquired llh
erty of speech.
It la rumored thBt Secretary of Ag
riculture Janice Wilson will resign
an aftermath of the Or. Wiley affair.
It seems that Taft has heen pavtieu
tally unfortunate In the members of
his cabinet. Every time a scrap blow
up anywhere In the government one of
them has to resign.
Enough has been disclosed before th
senate Investigating committee to make
certain the fact that l.orlmer la no lit
person to occupy a sent In the United
States senate, and that the state of
Illinots will have to elect an entirely
new set of state legislators before It
will be able to redeem Itself In the e>es
of the nation. ,
In England, liberals, and conserva
tives alike are supporting Premier As-
oulth In his Intern ion to restrict Ger
man aggression In Morocco. The Eng
lish people ate ever ready to si-rap
and scratch among themaelves, but a
common enemy always Hnds them
united. In this respect they are much
like the Hepuhli.Hu partv In this coun
try.
THE BUSINESS DOCTOR
* (By ROE FULKERSON
••You don’t know whether yeu are going to succeed or not,” repeated
the Business Doctor, after the young man Juat starting out In a new ven
ture.
"If you don’t know. I can tell you!
You are going to fall! Fall as certain
as you maintain that state of mind.
Fall aa certain aa the villain In a Jiggle
plrture ahow will be foiled before the
film Is over. Only the Him reel Jump
ing Its trolley will keep the villain from
getting •hla'n,’ and. only an accident
will allow, you to win when you are
uncertain about It yjuraelf. Vou are
like a woman on the mouse question:
She knows It la harmless, but lacka
confidence In her belief.
"You may term It ’New Thought,'
•Psycho-Therapy/ •Christian Balance, 1
or. In fact, any of th# up-to-now names
that are applied to this Idea; but. after
all. the quality Is merely good old-
faahloned enthusiasm! It’s an honeat
belief In your ability to overcome all
obstacles to accomplish your end. With
out this feeling you are doomed to fail
ure because you think failure, and a» a
man thinks so he la. It's a belief not
onlv In your owp ability, but a belief
that your proposition Is Ihe heat on* the world. If you think your store,
your goods, or your business proposition whatever It may he. la a weak
aort of a thing, you will. In aplte of Souraelf. allow that conviction to creep
Into your salesmanship, and the prop 0 aition becomes aa poor as you think
It Is.
“Only a few evenings ago I had a talk with an advertising solicitor for a
big dally paper, and he told me that when he first went Into the business he
had a hard time to make a living.
“In hla heart he believed he wag buncoing the puhlle out of their
money, until one day a merchant gav e him entire charge of hla advertising,
and In a few months he found, to his delight and surprise, that the man was
making plenty of money out of the venture. The advertising man at once
became enthusiastic about his own "ork. and hla enthusiasm crept Into his
solicitation, and he la today one of the best In hla line. He believes In hla
own proposition, and Is now a marked success, where once he had a hard
time selling one-flftleth of what he now sells. It's simply that he has gained
confidence In hla proposition. He knows It's good, and so can readily con
vince others that It la. He Is enthusiastic.
"Enthusiasm la undoubtedly the world's greatest business asset. It Is
better than wealth, power and Influence. Single handed. It wins In any prop,
oeltloff and under all circumstances. It gets capital for new projects. It puts
confidence Into the faint-hearted co-worker and It Is the leaven which vital-
itea the whole business loaf.
"If you have faith In your own project, belief In Its benefits, you have en-
thuslism and can prevail where you now make faint-hearted failures.”
A Washington piano house recently published an advertisement of some
second-hand pianos, which they suggested were adapted for country houses.
If they could have heard Ihe protest which went up from the farmers around
the city, where they live on «no-arre farms, own automobiles and send their
■children to Boston musical conservatories, they would have been sorry of the
slip.
John Wanamaker has put a wireless telegraph station In both hla New
York and Philadelphia stores.
Missouri not only has to be shown, but now and then she shows people.
In the race program of the Iaifayette Fount}- Fair association appears
this advertisement:
"After the races don’t forget that the Christian Phurch. of Hlgglnsvllle,
Mo., has a wide-awake Sunday echool. to which the whole country la Invited.
Claesea for everybody. The preaching' cervices are not so had."
The Rev. Mr. Hunter, the pastor. Is a firm believer In advertising, and
says It haa helped his church wonderfully.
"This Is a form letter, but It Is lust as full of personal Interest to you as
If a HS-pound. blue-eyed, coalk model, blonde stenographer had pounded It
out on the keyboard," la the opening paragraph of a form letter sent out by a
sectional bookcase firm.
COUNTRY HIGH SCHOOLS
By CELESTE PARRISH.
The establishment end development
of country high *ehoo|* which, a* we
hope and believe, will follow the adop
tion by the people of the Stovall
amendment and trie consequent break
ing of "'ancient bond*” which the phrase
In the conetltutlon ""for the elementary
branches of an English education only”
fastened upon the country school*, will
furnish one of the finest opportunities
for constructive educational work Geor
gia has ever had. If these opportuni
ties are used properly, social and eco
nomic results will follow which will
culminate In a degree, of happiness nnd
prosperity which we can hardly esti
mate. If they art neglected or misused,
the new school* will be a* Ineffective a*
some of the elementary schools now are
and for similar reason*.
The greatest fault In the course* dt
study In the country school is imita
tion of the city school without any con
sideration of the difference* between
the conditions which country and city,
school* are Intended to meet. As In nil
other Imitations, the weaknesses of the
city school are nearly always copied,
while the.strongest points are lost.
The greatest fault of the city high
school Is Its perpetuation of educational
survival* regardless of the difference
between middle age and twentieth cen
tury condition*. Many of them continue
the emphasla upon the Latin and Greek
which waa quit# correct before the Eng
lish. French and German lan
guage* were sufficiently developed
to be literary Instrument* and when
practically all tho knowledge which the
world had gained waa recorded in Latin
and Greek. Nearly all of them Still In
flict upon long-suffering boys nnd glrla
grammatical claeslflcatlona which were
made by intellectually restless scho
lastics who found In this way the ex
pression (which tho useless to others
was a relief to themselves) of mental
energy which could not be used crea
tively because of eccleslaatical prohibi
tion. There la perhaps no exception to
the rule of requiring from high school
class?* algebraic problem* which were
made by the Inventors of the science
for the express purpose of puzzling
rival claimant* of algebraic honors in
public contest*.
These "reverberation* from a far-off
time” are Interesting to the educational
nntlquarlan, hut cruelty to animals
from the standpoint of the child, weari
ness to tho flesh from the standpoint of
the teacher and criminal waste from
that of the economist. They are had
enough In the machine system* of city
schools, but when copied by a country
school, which ought to be independent,
original and the Ineptrer and promoter
of better form* of present-day life, they
are comic, pathetic and tragic all in
one.
Each high school established In the
country under the new privilege should
be the center of all phases of life of that
particular community. Ita course of
study and its occupations should grow
directly out of the need* of the com
munity, and It should react vigorously
In the development of the home and the
community into the highest life of
which they are^rapable. It should re
veal to eve O' boy whom it touches the
possibilities of prosperity and happiness
found In his own community and de
velop In him an ambition to become a
social and economic builder of family
and community welfare, it should re
call to every girl the Intellectual and
Ah a matter of course, scientific ag
riculture, farm economic*, the con
structive work in not'd and metal,
*ometimei* called manual tralnlng.‘flo-
Mirstlc science, domestic economy,
sanitation, hygiene and a very simple
study of society should be at the * enter
of the qourse of study tor all these
schools, each varying In It* concrete
application with local conditions and
needs. All the mathematics needed
can easily be taught In direct connec
tion with the farm, the garden, the
home and the constructive wrork.
Skilful farming and successful home-
making will not only Involve, but ne
cessitate more rhemirtry, physics, en
tomology nnd bacteriology' than any
high school now dreams of giving, but;
these should bs taught In direct con
nection with the practical work of the
school and not as separate disciplines.
Control of the English language aa a
noble and beautiful Instrument of com
munication: possession of history as
an aid In understanding the working
of force* in the past snd In directing
them In the present; literature and
music aa a means to the ""free enjoy
ment of life/" aa source* of Inspiration
and consolation and a* factors In the
development of personality: art as a
means of promoting the love of beauty,
whether in nature or in art and for the
sake of beauty In the home and sur
roundings; all these thing* should be
integral parts of the course of study In
the country high school, but they
should grow out of and be in Integral
connection with the needs of the stu
dent a* Indicated by hla experience.
In order that such a high school
shall develop, we shall need the beat
management and teaching. The coun
try people should determine to secure
this and to encourage Ita “perfect
work."
■M-H-H-l
Growth and Progress
Of the New South
Following la an additional Hat of
Industrie* organliad In the South for
the week ending July 27, as reported
to The Manufacturers" Record:
Plxon-8ml?h Engineering Com
pany, St. Louis, Mo., prepared pre
liminary report on proposed develop
ment of water power on Red river
near Hlgden. Ark.. 55 miles from Llt-
• • tie Rock. Dam 50 feet high by 700
feet long snd power plant estimated
to cost about $750,000, and to develop
10.000-horsepower for transmission
by electricity.
Texarkana Gas and Electric Com
pany, Texarkana. Ark.-Tex., Increaa-
atock from $200,000 to
I3M.OOO and will Issue bonds for $3,-
000,000; expend portion of new capi
tal for betterments, new machinery,
etc., as required by future develop
ments.
Chllhowee Mountain Mining and
Manufacturing Company. Pittsburg,
la., purchased 34 miles of Iron ore in
Blount counts'. Tennessee, and will
develop at once with view of build-
v|lfe WMt furnace * at or near Kno **
Dominion Tower Company. Hln-
Vn - was Incorporated with
$100,000 capital stock to operate elec
tric plant.
Fidelity Chemical Fertilizer Cor
poration, Clinton. Tex., was Incor
porated with ihO.OOO capital stock to
build plant on Houston ship channel.
C. \y. Stevens, Elizabeth City. N.
c., will erect building and Install
• ► machinery costing $25.WO for annual
1 * capacity of 4,000 ton* of cotton seed
and plans to build addition for fer
tilizer factory.
East Texas Ore Development CA.,
Port Bolivar. Tex., recently charter
ed with $2,500,000 capital stock, or-
•• ganlzed by electing officers and
awarded contract for ore crushing
and washing plant to cost from $40,-
000 to $50,000.
Virginia Veneer and Panel Com-
pany, Norfolk, Va.. was Incorporated
with $50,000 capital stock to manu
facture veneers.
Gates Lumber Company, Wilmar,
Ark., awarded contract for aaw mill
to have daily capacity of 100,000 feet
of lumber. This replaces plant re
cently burned.
Mvies Mineral Company, New Or
leans, La., fa progressing with de
velopment of salt, limestone and
gypsum properties near Pine Prairie,
having expended about $100,000, and
•» estimates that another $100,000 will
be required for shafts, building and
machinery.
river front, including construction of
intake, reinforced concrete construc
tion to replace wooden floor* and
stairways, construct twenty miles of
transmission line*. Install boilers and
turbines, etc.
America n-Canadian Land Com-
pany, cedar Rapids, Iowa, plans or- <
ganlsation of $150,000 company to do- .
velop salt deposits near Adrian.
to no-
■Jzs
YET IT MIGHT HAVE BEEN WORSE!
(CopyrlghL 1911. by Bur Company.)
Army-Navy Orders
' Movements of Vessels
And
Washington, Aug. 1.—Tho following
ordsra hav# boon Issued:
Navy Ordara,
Lieutenant Commander R. C. Bulrrtar,
to navy academy, Annapolis.
Lieutenant Commander A. Bronson,
Jr., to navy academy. Annapolis.
Lieutenant F. M. Robertson, to navy
academy, Annapolis.
Movements of Vessels.
Arrived—Kooheater. at. Port DePalx;
Whipple, Hopkins. Hull. Truxtun, Paul
Jones. Perry, Preble. Stewart and Row.
an, at Tacoma: Maine and Yorktown.
at J»rovlncetown; Ajax, at Bradford;
Potomac and Lebanon, at Norfolk;
Pontiac at navy yard. New York; Hec.
tor, at Hampton Roads.
Sailed—Saratoga. Albany and New
Orleans, from Wei Wei to Dalrlo;
Louisville, from Chicago for Detroit;
Sylph,.from Annapolis for Washington;
West Virginia, from Vancouver for
cruise; Burrows, from Provlncetown
for New York; Dolphin, from Glouces
ter for Providence; Peoria, from Port
Au Prince for Capa Haitian; Pompey,
from Castile for Koo Sung; Amman,
from Newport for Boston: Salem, from
Hampton Roads for Cope Hattlen.
COMMEND8 GEORGIAN'S
EDITORIAL, "TRAINING
THE SPENDER8"
Editor The Georgian:
In The Georgian of. Saturday. July
22. you wrote one of the finest edito
rials that over came out In jour In
teresting paper, namely. "Training the
Spenders."
It. was so opportune and appropriate,
coming nut as It did In the same Issue
with Dorothy Dlx’s "Modern Husband"
and Ella Wheeler Wilcox'a "Nothin;- la
Wasted Which We Give Willingly to
Others.” Both good writer* generally,
but In these two last pieces they must
have soured on the subject. _nd your
editorial will go a long way toward
correcting the errors and blunder*
made by them.
Your editorial le full of fact* and
figures, uncl'sputed ststements of af
fair* as they exist today, with the
growing extravaganee of Individuals
and government—causing crime to In
crease and taxes to be higher every
year.
With the greatest respect and love,
and almost reverence for the fair sex.
t do assert they are the weaker, and
according to divine and natural laws
should he subject and dependent upon
the sterner sex—like the Ivy around
the oak. Yours truly.
J. C. NEWTON.
Rural Route 8, Gainesville. Ga.. July
2i>, 1911. '
UNCLE WALT ^ PHILOSOPHER
Heard at the Zoo.
From Harper"*.
•'Herr's to pleasure”’ said the king
of the beasts at th* zoological garden
party. Tv* had a roaring tlm* all my
life."
"Same here!" said the grizzly bear.
"From the beginning my motto haa
been. "A abort Iff* and a hairy one.*”
I have a little hobby, and ride it every day, imd it is r fine
and nobby, and swell and resherahay. If people would hut lioed
it, this world would brighter be, for all the nations need it as
much as liberty. But when I would expound it.
A LITTLE the people all.disperse; I hear them say, “Confound
it!” Sometimes they even curse. And when *
HOBBY friend I visit, he whispers, at the door: "Here comes
the great what is it—the champion village bore!"
No matter where I travel, the same old tale is told; I see men
seratehing gravel when they, my form behold. They raise their
umberellers. these timid, nervous souls; they crawl into the eel-,
lars, they shin up lofty poles. Old women always dodge me.
likewise the village belles, and say they’d like to lodge me
in jailR or padded cells. The road is rough and rtitty on which
my trilhvs tread; e’en children sn.v I’m nutty, and throw
things at my head. And so I’m sad and sobhy, my voice to
sorrow pitched: I can’t explain my hobbv, for folks won't stand
unhitched. ' ' WALT MASON.
Copyright, 19H, by- George Matthew Adam*.
DAILY HEALTH CHAT ATLANTA PHYSICIAN
IODINE
To think that because a medicine Is
purely vegetable In composition It ts
less injurious than a mineral drug Is a
delusion. Yet, so popular la this fallacy
that medicine vender* are wont to ad
vertise their wares as "purely vegetable
and free from injurious mineral sub
stances." The most powerful poisons
known to science are "pure vegetable,"
aconitine and prussic acid, for example,
and not only la our daily salt mineral,
but some of the moat beneficial medi
cines ever used are mineral, or inor
ganic. Prominent among these stands
Iodine.
Iodine Is found as a normal constitu
ent of the animal body In the thyroid
gland, the gland at the base of the neck
that become* enlarged in the disease
called goitre. Iodine la a chief constit
uent in the active principle secretd by
thia gland, and It 1* known that if dis
ease or experiment atop* the action of
the gland and cuts off the secretion. In
sanity and death are sure to follow, un
less the defficlency Is made up for from
without by feeding the patient on thy
roid extract obtained from other ani
mal*. This potent secretion exercises a
powerful Influence, too, over tho growth
and development of children, and If the
gland becomes diseased In ehlldhood. \
growth Is arrested, and a type of |m-
berclllty called cretinism supervenes
Artlfleial feeding of tho animal thyroid I
extract, however, In these cases of}
cretinism often acts magically as a re
storative.
Then, Iodine is peculiarly interesting
as the essential ingredient In the best
of all "blo«*$ purifiers." or alteratives,
namely potassium Iodide. The potas
sium play* a minor part, apparently,
since any other "Iodide," aodlum Iodide,
for instance. Is about as potent. The
very potency, however, of the lodld**
or Iodine In any form, should warn th
Intelligent layman not to tamper
the drug without the guidance «r •
physician. ” ..
But the most remarkable F£°P*J;-
of Iodine, perhaps, is Jts wonderful an
tiseptic power. Re<»nt * x PerimenL
have proved that tincture of i
stands without a pee$* as an effect***’
and penetrating antiseptic. So great'
the confidence of the up-to-date sur
geon In this virtue of the drug that r* •
the last year or so it has become tn
custom to dispense with the
washing and re washing of the ncia
operation with a series of cleanser* an
antiseptics, and. Instead, simp >' '
paint the skin with tincture of lodin^
This change Is nothing *hort of re\ •
lutkmary, but It saves time, save5 «•
ting and slopping the patient, and eft
no doubt, save* life—by preventing u
face infection.
Her Method.
From The Boston Herald. 1
Mistress—Have you a refererm*
Bridget—Folne; Ol held Ihe p r * K
oyer her till I got it.
Maxims to Msmorizs.
From The Xew York Telegram.
Do not know* everything.
Ripening love is the stillest.
Prosperity make* few friends.
Take care or care will take >' oU h „
The heart is often elated when m
face is calin, . . vn , r
Make your practice square \*irn
profession. . , t
To be misunderstood Is the cro * • *
bitterness of lire.
When the heart is afire some spar
will fly out of the mouth. %