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■THE ATLANTA GEORGIAN AND NEWS: WEDNESDAY, NOVEMBER lM), 1911.
THE ATLANTA GEORGIAN
(AMD NEWS)
fEx-rpt 8unda*'t
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One Veer ; **“
si* Mentm.... *•{•
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Telephones Connsctlng All Department*.
, tong Otttsnoe Term.'nsf*.
nm>ri4 a* second-da**
post office at Atlanta.
>f March I. 117*
n. Palmer. Foreign Travelt^ Retire-
sentettve. Address. rare -The Corfclao.
'Ham*. Ca.
If run have any tronWo erttlhe TJv*
flee rail n amt Newt, tatOrhen* the cir-
eulatjnn depsrrment ami h-v* It promptly
remedied Roth phone* 900C.
PohaeHbera desiring The •lifiriiK!
ami Nne/a dlaenntlm-ed roust notify ima
nlTle. on the data of expiration. otnerwve
II will ha rontlmted at the regular ««»•
aerlplinn rate, nnlll notlre In step I 11 r# *
eelved.
[air Iriflen, for what is of su-
premest moment to the people of
this state is the fact that Pope
Brown is NOW standing staunch-
ly by the state-wide lap - , while
Dick Russell is standing against
it ami Joe Brown astride it,
and that the election of Pope
Brown means THE PRESERVA
TION of that law. ami the elec
tion of either of the others means
FURTHER OPPORTUNITY for
its enemies to destroy it.
. - • . '
Small consolation it will be. to
prohibitionists to say, ‘‘Well, the
Jaw that tve had and had fought
for .so long is gone, but then we
have a prohibitionist in the gov
ernors cltnir. and : he’s always
been, oh. so consistent.” *
:’ ',{' r /"i ■'<, ‘
Pope, Brown higi foaglit the
liijupr traftin' in tile pas? and, un
like Dick Russ^li; who is work-
lngsfor it, and, unlike Joe Brown,
who is dpiiifp. nothing, he is fight
ing AGAINST it NOW.
THAT’S CONSISTENCY!
ENOUGH.
UNCLE WALT ^ /( NEW JERSEY RESULT
m WILL HELP WILSON!
, It l» desirable that all enmmuhleallyn*
Intend** for rmblfcsf Inn In Tbj O»or>n*n
and Now* be limited to
•n length It In Imperative that they bs
alyned. nn nn evidence of good faith. JJ**
ieefed manuscript* will not ho returned
unleet sump* *re aent for the purposs-
Th© Georgian and New* print* no «n«
clean or objectionable advertising matte*
Neither doe* It print whisky or liquor ad*
HE'LL SEE IT WHEN HE WAKES.”
(At the Battle of the Wllderneae a gal
lant young Mlasissippinn had fallen, and
at night, Ju*t before burying him.
there came a letter from her whom he
oved beat. One of the group around
bis body—a minister who** tenderne**
waa womanly—broke the silent tearful-
nes* with which he saw the dead man**
letter; he took tt and laid it upon the
Amid the clouds of battle amok*.
The aun had died away,
And where the atorm of battle broke
A thousand warriors lay.
A band of friends upon the field *
Stood 'round a'youthful form.
Who. when the warcloud’e thunder peal’d,
Had perished In the atorm.
Upon fils forehead, on hi* hair.
The coming moonlight break*, a
And each dear brother standing there
A tender farewell takes.
But ’ere they laid him In his home
There came a comrade near,
And gave a token that had come
From her the dead held dear.
moment’s doubt upon them press'd,
Then one the letter take* •
And lays It low upon hi* bNast—
He'll tee It when he wakes.”
Oh! thou who dost In sorrow wait.
Whose heart with anguish breaks,
Tho thy dear message came too late, %
"He'll see It when h* wakes.*'’
ti ♦■**
Ne'er more amid th* fiery storps »
Shall hla strong arm be seen;
No more, his young and manly form
Tread Mississippi's green;
And e'en thy tender words of love—
Th* words affection spsaks—>
Came all too late; but oh! thy love
Will eee them when he wakes.
No Jars disturb hit gentle rest,
No noise hie slumber breaks,
But thy words sleep upon his breast—
He'll eee them when he wakes."
—Frank Lee.
* The pumpkin is a gorgeous fruit. I’m glad that farmers
always sow it. We should unite its charms to toot, tho cook, the
farmer* and the poet. It should appeal to every heart, the pump
kin, succulent and mellow! The' finest thing
THE PUMPKIN in all the mart—altho it has a streak of yellow.
It looks so tempting in the fields that it will
• moke a hungry man turn; when plucked by skillful hands it
yields the autumn pic and jack-o-lantern. The pumpkin pie—
oil. jumping ginger! No other pie has such delights! No other
pie can be infringer upon this masterpiece’s.rights! As lonely as
the rnoou above us, without a peer we'see it stand; and if our
housewives really love us, they’ll make us pies to.beat the band.
Tho pumpkin pie came down the ages from Plymouth Rock and
Boston pike, and should inspire the poet's rages far more than
eagles and the like." It beats the bulwarks and escutcheons of
which our patriots declaim; indorsed by Wilev and Woods
Hutchins, ft basks in an eternal fnhie. WALT MASON.
Copyright. 4111, by Qeorge Matthew Adams.
Charles Townsehd Copeland Harvard s Live
. Wire Professor
His Contsmpt for Machine Pol
itics Will Make Him Much
Stronger With Masses.
The following Is tom The Detroit
(Mich.) Times:
The result In NSW Jersey wilt huve
the effect of making Wilson stronger
with the masses.
The courage of the man and his con
tempt for th» time-serving tactics of
the practical school of politics is shown
In Ills willingness tn go Into the cam
paign heart and soul in support -of the
candidates’ who were pledged to the re
form measures .he is advocating .for
New Jersey.
Expediency whispered “Keep out. You
are not a candidate this year and why
give your detractors a chance to say y'o’.j
have lost ground?" But Woodrow- Wil
son Is not built that way. He does not
appear to be worrying about his own
political salvation,
A Woman’s Success as an
Apple Grower.
There has just closed at Madi
son Square Garden, New York, a
great land show, or, more accu
rately, a show of the products of
the land from all sections of the
country—a sort of county fair na
tionalised.
Its extensiveness may be gath
ered from the fact that the at
tendance during the ten days it
was held reached fully 2(^0,000.
Tho viaitors displayed keen inter
est in ' the inducements offered
home-seekers in the districts/rep
resented by tho displays.
The exhibitors’ contest that at
tracted htost attention was that
in the apple-growing department,
and this was won by a woman
whose orchard numbers .but fo n vea ,n *B n ut“the?**un*
' The antagonism of the name class
whleh has shown lt» hand against him
gave Roosoveit hi* great popularity
{John S. Reed. In American Magazine. , few from every senior claaa. he la like a
If you climb the south stairway of Hoi- 1 roommate. Those are the privileged In
tis Hall, one of the ancient aw! honorable dividual* who «t«y after hours In Ids
dormitories <-f HarArd, some Saturday room, who walk across the yard with him. ./.roamed for hls trementlous nil-
night after to o’clock, you wUl llnd who sit with him on the bench under the h)m .
Charles Townsend Copeland In his room elms on spring afternoons. 11c treats as a candidate to succeed mm
uo under the roof by the side of a "sea them as his brothers: some of them self In the presidency,
coal Are;” and, overflowing from chair would rather tell their troubles to him As we analyse the returns from Mas-
and settle to the floor at his feet, a crowd | than to thalr families He Is always sachusetts and New Jersey, It looks ,\s
of undergraduates. '1 here are athletes, ready to advise, to give, to comfort, to , f ft Democrat would be elected pres!-
* college papers, Socialists, athe-1 laugh, t have never known anyone to - -
■H , negro -waiter at the Union or a
bushel. ! scrub woman In a dormitory falls sick,
It Is a wonderful room. Ilnedfrom floor or dies, or man-leu, "Copey always re-
to low celling with books. The broad memtwrs. Few people know what he has
mantel awl the little wall space ere coV- J done far tho poor, the weary, and tha mis-
ered up with signed pictures of great pen- I eralde. ......
pie that you read about and all the long None who have ever seen him will for- • , -vr /~\ J _
■ ' ... _ ■— get the eternal glass of water on hi, /A rTnV-T'J UVV Kjrders
loh he drink. In the mldat of an v'/.f ’ y., ,
dent In 1912, providing the party talc’s
It* cue from the kind of onemlee ne
ha* mado In New Jersey and nominates
Woodrow wltgon for that office.
generation* of boy* who*e friend be has j get the ete
been. Over the door le a horaeihoe and a desk, which —
hunch of rowan berries. The only light Interesting sentence, tils grimace of dls
■ ~ —-- “• the gust when something gob* wrong, the bit-
** Ing sarcasm with which he punishes late
comers and Intcrruptera, and the mock.
ts from the Are, perhaps a candle on
mantelpiece, and the reading light to mo
left of the Are, where slta the little man,
Intermlnahl/smoking an Infamous brand
of cigarette*. Everybody talks id tho
thing nearest hla heart; everybody Anris
himself alert, uulck, almost brilliant.
Startling theories are ezpounded. and
atrange system* of phlloaophy. One tell*
of rowing, another of throwing the ham
mer. of - partlea" In town, of clubs and
hooka and collaga politics. I don't know
whether the llttlo man 1* Interested In
these thinn, which he has heard from so
many classes, but he evidently loves the
spirit of youth that la In then# Indeed,
he once said that If ever he were cut off
from youth he would wither up and die.
Assistant professor of English, Charles
Copeland le known as ‘•copey" by the
university and by hundred* of graduatee;
anti the nickname shows how .much ho Is
Ing fore# more feared and respected
than he.
"Strange," you Will say. "t never heard
of a teacher who was a chum of the
taught. Harvard muat be a curious
But It Isn't. With any of 1 the other
professor* the rule hold*-good. Perhaps
they each have their little group 4f satel
lites. Copeland has tho whole firmament,
yt ■
Union,
some T.. s ... ....... . —■ — .—-—...
The dining room Is crowded with "sports. I
"grinds," athletes, dilettanti—two . to
three hundred of them—the moet repre-
•entstlve crowd ever gathered together
at Harvard, except for.a foOtliall game.
They greet him a* they would greet one
of their classmates suddenly become fa
mous, or a newly elected class officer—a*
, _ . some one friendly, and particularly of
tit of llPl’ 111!*, themsclvea: when he rends, they arc un-
. a . 'ii • i " j conUplourt'of anythlriK else. Kli«W, Hhet
baud a year ago, Mrs. Rowland Mane. Hhftke*n*aro. Burn*. Cnnrn.r. llur-
- - - i™™ 11 Dowell—lhry irJIJ take any
and it*k for more,
rul gift of knotting
elloY.-w. Hometime*
■eut m4n lie h»* known or studied;,or a
v'r< •> r m*
rhrlHtmi
Pope Brown for Governor.
Rot, utter rot, are these charges
against the consistency of Point
Brown as a- prohibitionist. In
the political history of this state
there have been FEW MUDDY-
THE-WATER, SIDESTEP-THE-
ISSSUE DEVICES SO CHEAP.
In the first place, they are in
essence untrue. In the Rceond
place, they have no bearing on:
the issue now—which it. the re
peal or not of the present state
wide law.
To aay that a matt was a local
optioniat in Georgia years ago
says nothing against him as a
prohibitionist now. The most
ardent prohibitionists were once
local optionists. Local option
then meant the restriction of tho
liquor traffic; now it means the
enlargement of it.
The fight against liquor in this
state has passed thru many
stages—local option first, that
the counties that wished to might
go dry: then the establishment of
dispensaries in counties where
prohibition at the time was out
of the qnestiou; then the aboli
tion of these game dispensaries,
and finally the law milking dry
ull the state.
We find Pope Brown, when a
member of the legislature, voting
for one dispensary bill and 1
against another! and as a private
citisen leading the fight for the
abolition of the dispensary in his
home county.
It is not important for the poo-
f ie of .Georgia to know that Pope
irown all his life advocated no
other temperance measure save
a state-wide law. But what is
important for them to know is
that he has been a consistent foe
of the liquor traffic and that,
whatever method aeemed most
practical at the time for deliver
ing the traffic the hardest blow,
took that method, and this ill
all justice may be siiid of him.
But we may
unsideration.
all these
light-as-
twcnty-njne acres!
She is Mrs. Ella D. Rowland,
of Zillah, state of Washington.
Eighteen years ago she and her
husband moved to Washington
and settled on the small farm
that lias now won prominence as
the spot producing tho best ap
ples on the North American con-
tinent. . Its value hits increased
since that, time from $4 (> *<> acre
to its present valuation of $1,600
an'acre 1 .' . _ .! ' (
Since, the death of her hits
year ago, ’
has herself managed tho orchard faVa h^'gw.^^hem'ra"
and brought it up to its pres- JS&JftrjUStSra
ent high state of efficiency. - She - -
intendH. to continue tho manage
ment, for it affords her employ
ment of a congenial and interest
ing nature and at the Name time
a most satisfactory income.
From the foregoing incidents
may he ’feathered a number r of
ynlitablo leasons. One is ,thht
woman, if she will, need not-nny-
where be economically depend
ent; that practically all fields of
endeavor, are open io her. and.
whatever the field she selects, sho
may he found among the most
successful therein.
Another is that Washington is
not the only state wherein ap
ples may be grown successfully.
The same scientific knowledge,
the same common-sense ns that
employed h.v Mrs. Rowland, may
be relied upon to prodttee the
same results elsewhere. In Geor
gia nttd the South are some ot
the host apple lands in tho coun
try. They need only to be giveu
a trial for their surprisingly val
uable qualities to he proved. .
And mother lesson is, that the
South must make its advantages
known to the world as the West
and Northwest are already doing
so effectively.
■’.i a ... -■*
Mr*. Pankhurat, the noted auffru-
aette, \vn» bowled down when aha at
tempted- to make a speech in Wail
Street. Only money li allowed tn talk
there.
Twenty Macon drunk, arralaned be
fore the .recorder could, not remember
where they got It. The u,e of boot*
destiny* both the mental and mural
facultle*.
The Jewel* of ex-Sultan Abdul Hamid
ere twins Bold at auction tn Parla. A
deposed inuBaFc-h always ha* more need
of stub than u»c for slltterins orna
ment*.
The state of Iowa haa reaiatered a
trade mark design and hereafter prod
uct* of that state will be stamped with
the device, which bean the word,
"Made In Iowa." Some effective adver
tising that!
A Vermont man traveled from Chit*
to hla native atate In order to eat
Thanksgiving dinner at home. Thanks
giving and Christina, are horns festi
val, who** reach I, to the uttermost
parts of the earth.
ra UIM1 iiti'Tt utnciB, jiiiii in® •tiu'-'
inan Into which he nir, with delinquent*.
He u*ed to write, and write well, a* ill*
"Life of Edwin Booth," hi* edition of
lure- to him now.
very rarely ever
aloud to him.
he I, not a acholsr In tho aceeptod' *en»e
of tho word, altho he probably know*
mora about the human side of history
and literature than any other man In
the university. He I* sometlmee arro
gant, and often rude to «tr.nger* or nerv
ous undergraduate; and he ho, violent
and Instinctive antipathies. That unfor
tunate and repellent creature, ahe serfou*
minded, humorles, "grind," will be sure
to resent "Coper's" frequent digressions
from th* subject of the eour*e. which
treat of the relative worth of f*» and
electricity for a reading Ught. the advan
tages or politeness, the desirability of*
hair-cut and the Hkr. /
However much men may drift away
from Harvard when they graduate, they
never lose touch with "Copey." Hi* dl»-
"‘lie* number hundred*, and are scattered
over the world; and wheh they com*
elf "iVingtv" tho fir*! fhtit thftv tv-ant
bopk, "Dragon's Blood,” In this
""Sear Cope; Mr. Peached Carnahan,
wlian he returned from Kafranlstan. tn
b*d.»h*pe, hut with.* kins'* heart in a
bag. - DXilaimed to tho man Jn the new**
imp«*r offlets 'And you've been witting
hwre AVer ajnee". Thpre lw only a Mg In
th«‘lof1ottUig i*oke; yet in Riving you the
strfhs to cut and the bag to open, r feel
ahmethlns of Peachey's ttoitder to think
•cross all* this distance and
past*
hooka moves thi* pro-
— cmgrounji c. _____ __J __
cession of youth. Many of u*. growing from R.ntn Domingo for at. Thom**;
rolfr frtendshh)* and'ore IBZf'tmft Tali ^'F'U^^JSS.'Tf^nmo'.rnQnds'fli'r
jfor Valparaiso.
And Movemtnt* of Veeeele
business Doctor
RoeFumenron
^ TBADE MARK RB.OIJTERBD
"Tout* principal trouble seen
you never learned a little song tin
deties When I was a youngster.
Washington. N*v. 29.—Tin- Mlowirg
order* have been - Issued: -
Army Order*.
Promotion*: C. Q. Lawrence . from
F!r*t lieutenant. Eleventh Infantry, to
captain. November 21, assigned to
Tenth infantry.
C. L. Eastman, second lieutenant.
Twenty-eighth infantry, ta first lieu
tenant, November 21, assigned to Elev
enth infantry.
Engineer* corps—changes; Major Vv.
p. Woolen, relief from Second battal
ion of engineers on lt» departure from
Honolulu. ' 1
Second Lieutenant J. R. D. Matheson
from Fort LoaVenworthi to Honolulu.
Seventh company. Third battalion. •
Captain W. A. Mitt-!*!! bn January
to Wheeling, V. Va.
Colonel C IVTetSftE Infantry, unas-
slgned, la asrigned to Eighth infantry
and retired from active service Mavrh
27th.
First Lieutenant H. S. Herdlnu, Fifth
ravalrj'i to Washington. D. C, and re
port to chief- of staff for duty. - •' * 1
Navy Orders- - . .. - »-
Lieutenant W. S. Anderson to com-
iryind the Tankton. December IS.
Movement* of Navel Vessels.
Arrived—Bagiev. Bdlley and Sterling
at Annapolis; Wheeling and North Car
olina at Sknto Domingo City;'Hector
at,Newport: OregoiTwt San Franclaeoy
Jt)*M.n at Mare Island; Cheyenne at
Tacpni’V.. } •? •;
Sdlled—Arpthuaa from Port Arthur.
Texas, for Key West; Nebraska from -
Boston for Nswport; Monaghan fyom
Norfolk far Cape Henry; Washington
i to he. said the Business Doctor
,• used to teach me in the temperance.,
1 don t mean by this that you a ,.>
drinking man. but the choru- to t
song contained theso words ■/,.
courage, my boy. to say no.'
seenw to bo tho principal deflct*nvv.»
your make-up. •
“There is little doubt that this smr
word of two letters l s the hardest u o,i
in the English language for the lUvr
age man to say. Take a clan, „ i,,, ,
> oyer your past life. Try to recall t
- your mind all the trouble and
tunc which have ever fallen t„ vo u ,'
lot. Try to recall the thlnss w’hio-
have caused you the most misery t,!'
to remember the things which havi
stnt you home late at night
to yourself In a manner that
make you fight If the words were s
by another Try to bring back
inind the things which have made',,,,,
Bb staring up into tho darkness a f,«"
,'iou have gono to bed at night the
things that caused you to toss f„,
bbbrs in your bed. unable to woo th-
goddess of sloop. Is It not a fact that
each and every one of them would haw been avoided If you had had tit-
nerve to sa/ that one llttlo word at the right moment?
"Ever)' moral obliquity, every mlst.,ko In your life, can be traced bark
to one point where it could have been tvoided had you only had tho enur
age to say no. Inherent In every man Is the knowledge of right , n i
wrong, but few men have the courage to follow this knowledge. Vou haw
placed your name on paper beruueo you Imln't the backbone to refuse «!thr,
you knew you were taking chances. You.have taken that one extra'drink
when you knew you were wrong, but ha, n't tho nerve to turn down th.
sot of ‘good fellows' who Insisted. You rove dilly-dallied with Solicitor*
for fake stick propositions till you allowedlyourself to bo talked Into buvlnv
docks which were not wortli the paper tlley were printed on. when von
• should hav-B turned tho solicitor down at mice.
"You have extended additional credit t\ patrons when you knew th.
chances weir hot one in ten of you over K/ftBig the money. You have
given dissipated employee* another chance,iecause you hadn’t the court*.
• of your cvrlctlons that the fellow would titer make good.
"Why you or any other business man slAuld have this splneies- i.m-
fish <ll*po*ltloit Is a mystery that wlli irmilIrlunsolved till the end „f u, n j.
the psychologist* and other mental KclentlrtAhave no explanation to olt.r
They only know that every error of this kind teaken*. the stamina of a nun
and that cyei-y . time lie fulls to make fl rim ip,’emphatic no end an argu.
ment he has diminished hi* ability to say It next time. So also |m« It
been demonstrated that ever}' time a man mclarcs himself in this min-
ner he makes it easier to do next time. 1 t
"There 1, another tingle of. this matter alri. Men who come to vou
.’aajlcltlng for this, that or the other thing are entitled to'n positive an-
|*i>r. - They me at expense and theif time I* k-orth money to the Urn;.
• which employ them, just the same as the tlmeWf your clerks is worth
money to you, and every time that you falter. Imitate and put off your dr.
elslon In dealing with them you are taking up ttne which they could em
ploy on some other prospect. \
"If you propose to do business with them, dd It. If not. tel! them »„
and let them be on their way. Try to teach jiurself that Invaluable
ability to.'ray the one little word Which nettle, hi,.., matter for all time
The first time you go up against temptation in'he form of an invitation"
to drink, to buy spinethlng you do hot wont, to tdorse some other man',
paper, to prolong an overdue account, come out wth that emphatic llttlo
word and stick to if; . It pays plethoric dlvldeny<."
them, shame, them for tti.lr' Igno- Into life,
ranee, tells thetn that they ought to read/
grumble* at the light, or the stuffiness
of the runm—with such dmllne** of
jihrase, such sympathy with youth, that
"Copey'*" official classes are hul * part
of his great • teaching. One year he will
give a course on Rcott, another year on
Dr. Johnson: but lit,, favorite and most
delightful course Is In English compel
Certain day* he will
rrmlnls-
t, or he-
_ JHMPIIMHPmi uni.
verbal peace. Rovlallsm. anarchy, ur th*
theater.
never touch upon the subject: rer
ring anil telling anecdotes, reading, .
ginning a frre.for-ail discussion on
like It. II* has ■
K5SSS tnsply
tloualy. one lea
with c*(u>Hqnil:
eomtUilnc witty to
mmL . ...
ilrlng to teach,
earn* Rngtlah
J; Irrldcrtally,
literature and the !n«t art of ccnveraatiun,
together with other thtnn not taught In
book*. * j -l
v To M* Intimate friend*, which arc a
.,' , y*’"X"J »!♦ N'l I
X Growth and Progress X
+ of the New South J
Opponents of ex-Foraater Olfford
Plnchot declare that hi* conservation
doctrines are "the dreams at a nrtl-
lionalre Idler." All the same, he helped
tu prevent the national itilneral and -
forest land* from being gobbled up by I
sharpen who would thereby become I
additional millionaire Idlera ,
_ n* . ,
The .Manufacturers Record:
and Invest- ■
Hnhe-Hllt Real
msnt Company; Tryon, N. c.. and ,
tireenvllle. R. O., purchased SOO •
acres of land and obtained options <
on 5.00* seres at Tryon and will d*. ,
relop for residential, .'ndnrirl.il and ,
agricultural purposed; plans Include .
construction of .waterpower-electrl- ,
eal plant, erection of rottag**, qultl- ,
vat Ion of grapea, apple*, ete. A
Macon Railway and Ught Uompany
and Central fleorgta Power Com
pany, Macon, sia., will extend iron*- i
mission lines, build power huu/c. i
DAILY HEALTH CHAT
BY AN ATLANTA PHYS1CU
CONSTITUTIONAL IMMORALITY
One of the mori perplexing problems for person* of usou’nii mind
— — -,h as they er oh '
- J highly intet'ten
It I* noi feasible t get them inf,, ssyinnu
with which physlclnn* and
ease* of eonSlltutlens! Immorality.
Every probation officer Is familiar with
iorthhs*
i of the I
o or Bret
children. Raeli officers constantly meet
with • young people of average or more
than average Intelligence and physically
well, yet as prone -to crime as sparks are
to fl.v upward. The trouble with theso ■—
-"a*—Maught some tis*l_.._.. v ,
constitutionally Imroral. and kre a men-l
eee Jo themselves,ad the community at
Constitutional imtorallty is an Incur-
ablo dlseaso.
Ha . The only feasible lessor* for the din-
law*. In a word they are unmoral. mutton of It Is to -retrain per.on. el
If such perrons were Insane in the hereditary mental ofneurotlc taint front,
aceepted sense, the problem would be marriage. J
easy, as there are: of course, provisions Perhaps education is to heredity it
the most hopeful retraining measure, i
out ntofafi sens* an, ...
moral concepts. Being -devoid of any
sense of obligation toward others, they
are swayed .by purely selfish emotions
ard appetites, and ar* thus constantly
liable to transgress moral and statutory
■ there Is In even
for the Insane. Am
stele one or ntorcreformstorlcs intends
mainly for victim of constitutional Im
morality: nevcrthje** It Is usual to re
DID YOU EVER KNOW IT TO FAIL?
(reproof ear barn, etc., haring •
I) available for Imnrovrmeolp.
RecuritJ- Cement end Lint* Copt- ,
peny, Baltimore, Mil., baa plans for- 1
addition to plant to Berkeley. \v -
V*„ to Increase dally capacity at ■
crushed atone from 1.000 to x.Mty ■
uyWty
W.
Va..
I250.C00 corn pally to estawlsh wool
en mill at Ran Antonio. Texas.
lllo t'etle Ctae- Products
panr, Ran Benito, Texas, was
porated with »te*.0«« capital
nMntifaeiurs clay product*.
J. K. Chltton, Char!
purchased *.4*0 acres
B
Com- 4*
Incor- 4*
j*twk
» manufactura clay product#. 4»
J. K. fhHton, Oharlaatou. \\. \*., +
irchuae*! a. 400 aew of waat V!r- 4*
lie rapwaania T
corporation. compoUd of Plilladel* 4*
phia eapltaliata. . 4*
Scott-Lambarl Lumber Company. •(•
Aabevllle. N. C., purchaaeil hard- 4*
Wood timber Und and wll! build mill J
with dally capacity of 10.000 feet of J
'“ItraSdln Lumber Company. Lenoir. 1
N. C.. wa* lneurp*,rated with 91.950.
000 capital stock and wUl devriot
90,000 acres «* timber land prevt
ously purchased: wUl build saw
mills, planing milt* and other ptante.
Alien* Nut Loek Company. New .
Orleans, La., waa Incorporated with <
M rMrD3»*5&, aril Company. •
gBffSTiSkiffgwMr'Ssl-
wtU Improve orchard* ami hulld-
Ings at a coat of 5»*.*0*.
Routhern Tiro and Ruber Com-
Prohibition snapshots|
By REV. A.CWARD
-Vi/HEK YOU HAVE ONLY* A FEW
MlhiUTEb To catch Your TUa.in,-
AND You 5uppEiA\.r remember
Muyr -SENP AN
^vPHONE. MEStSAftE.—
-AMP YoU RUN u/ilplY’ INTP
The nearest telephone 5tationa
-THRRES AS.WAYS Some ONE AHC-AP
of You*, isn't it that way
Every' time.?
Colonel Gilmore, present of th« Molkl
Lloenee leaguo. an orinlzution of tbeir
liquorltcft «o combat h»» Antl-^tloo
leajrue, "There I; more liquor l
tho homcH of cltizena of rohiMtnn fititi
than In the open aalom of the «f
Ntatea.” \\Tio believes th jiiatement!
Tho tuiloon count lea ofrexas hid < I
time# as many rnurdfa, populzth
conahlered. nn did the pihJbJtJon
ties durlny 1907-0S.
Mayor Marshall, of ColLihua, Ohio, i
acconiplfahlng womlern in hi» HuiW-
clnrtnR' movement. Both fk brewer* «
Personal Liberty league pfple urr kk
Ing, but it will do no goo with >I*yi
Marshall |n control.
*The Kika Ihipld Regiete. <ay*:
banka show more money-y thoui
of dollars In the taxings deutment o+m
than thero **as 111 the day«bf the ftof
gerle.'*. anrl much of this itrc*se I
new * accounts.’* .
Vlnrinla than ever before in t. _
Thero are now only 4?S in the hol«* swB
West Virginia is In excellen »h«pt
make a dean-tip when she votivn i “
wide prohibition.
.. ... the open saloon on Sund* 1
claim that ifce dosed saloon oqfium
kcepa visitors away from the ch.i
iection in Texas, say*: ,
douhtcdly true that the P°werf JJ
fluence of the church carried tne loM
lion cause so near to victory in in*i
Star state. The church force
active and is perfectly united,,*".,
of the prohibition amendment.
Hducatioii and information will ev»aj|
ally solv<tthe liquor problem In tWJ
try In exactly the same way ** 2* *3
Ing of a ray of light l»'" ‘
makes such a place Impracticabu n
life.
anti-treating orSfnance wtd«*ii th '
council passed. He declare.** fhaMjjj
Ing is responsible for 90 i»*
drunkenness.
Congressman Robson w)^ . y.^u
the riH'em light for prohibition m . J
will begin a movement .l 1 ; i . i „ V l ituiio*^
L'nited States.
A recent Investigation
government developed the
of one hundred deaths from
10 per cent were drinker* • f
beer, and only 20 p*r c ' e,s,
drinkers.
rather to the contrar>
Can any grocer
butcher,
hardware m*n.,j
goods merchant, hsr»iware *n ha ,
or banker show that hl-« buJn ^ ft
injured by the passage of r> - ^
blbitlon law?
What will the prom.
people ff the “aaloon °P , ’ 7._ rt t,riS
hear running for governor ,/ •
become the chief execute ■ -