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EDITORIAL PAGE
THE ATLANTA GEORGIAN
Published Every Afternoon Except Sunday
By THE GEORGIAN' COMPANY
At 20 East Alabama St.. Atlanta. Ga.
Entered as second-class matter at postoff:ce at Atlanta, under act of March 3, 18,3.
The Automobile Business Is
Only in Its Babyhood
v r »
One Man Is Making $600,000 A MONTH Out of His Fart In
terest in One Single Machine—That Is Only the Begin
ning. Who Will Be the REAL Automobile Builder?
Before long in this country somebody is going to manufacture
1,000.000 automobiles every year.
Who will be that man?
He and his company—it will be too big for one man perhaps—
will make a net profit of from $25,000,000 to $50,000,000 a year—
and be entitled to it.
A car will cost less than SSOO, perhaps less than S4OO.
It will be sold for about SSO more than it costs to make.
It. will be a car built for strength and endurance, for sufficient
hut limited speed.
It. will he made nearly entirely of metal, little if any wood
about it. little if any upholst°ry.
It will be arranged so that it can be used for a delivery wagon
or mechanic's wagon all through tlm week, and a pleasure vehicle
for the family on Sunday, or in the evening.
It will be arranged also—and what inventor will give us this
feature in a hurry in such away that the owner will be able to
utilize the power of the engine for work of all kinds.
The farmer will .jump into his machine, go out two or three
miles or more to the piece of land that he is clearing, and then use
the machine for power to run a stump puller.
Or he will take his machine out to the fruit orchard, jack up
the two rear wheels, put the weight of his own body and halt the
weight of the ear on a disc harrow. AXD DISC HARROW HIS
ORCHARD WITH THE POWER OF THE MACHINE THAT
TOOK HIM TO HIS WORK.
/ He will go to another place where his truck farm needs irriga
tion. The engine in his ear will be hooked up to the pump, aud the
irrigating will be done.
1 Who is going to manufacture a million cars a year? Where is
tfhe man big enough Some one. or some company, is going to do it.
\ The car will be built TO LAST AND TO WORK. It. will be
/busy ail day. It will put out of business more than half a dozen
| horses —and a good thing.
? All the grass ami hay and corn and oats that we can spare we
need for cows to give milk and for beasts to give meat.
The more quickly the horses go, th; better for the farmers and
the better for the whole country.
Who will supply the combination automobile '
Who will give us the car to take the farmer and his hands to
work, and when they get there supply the power to do the work
What car will take a sawyer oft' to his aw mill and then run
' the saw the rest of the day.' •
What <ar v ill Like Die ! mi 5 to »Iw bi'.- <it v limp. . , H id
then run the vacuum pump to pull all the dust out ot the house and
send it down the sewer or burn it ’
Let. no one tell yeti that the automobile business is being over
done.
E As great as the invention of the steam engine is the invention
of the explosive gas engine that takes men at high speed and safety.
The wonderful car at low price will come.
And the wonderful car I'm a high price—ami worth the price—
. will persist and increase in efficiency.
Automobiles on wings will carry human beings through the air.
Automobiles v ill carry men along the road, automobiles will
I carry mechanics to their work ami help them DO then work when
■ they get there.
The man who gets $600,00(1 a month out of his automobile husi
i ness now is entitled to it he gives tlm country a great deal more
than the country gives him.
* But, unless he grows, lie will be small compart’d to the man
I that one day will build a million machines each year, and make a
’ fortune equal to thai'o! -loiin D Rockefeller 5\- ■ ••Hing the best pos
sible article \T THE I OWI-W POSSIBLE COST.
i Do Most W omen W ant to
i Vote?
I
iP ■ 1 " “““- 1 -
■; The question whether the majority of women want to vote
may remain an open question. But the question whether most
B women DO vote when they have the chance is approaching a set
tlement .
In San Frant iseo the other day,the newly enfranchised wo
men of that city had a chance to vote at a municipal election.
NINETY PER CENT OF THE REGISTERED WOMEN I AST
i BALLOTS, AS COM PARED WITH FIFTY PER ( ENT OF THE
' MEN.
The women who served as members of the election boards
i are said to have done their work exceptionally well.
Now, it may be that women when endowed with the elee
[■ .toral franchise make use of it. not because they want to. but be
- cause they think they ought to. If so. it can hardly be’maintained
that a little more conscientiousness put into the ballot box will
hurt the quality of the result.
Many public men—Mr. Roosevelt among tht ni- -st em to think
they have exhausted the woman 's uft'rage subject and exhibited
their own unimpeachable fairmind'dness when tbmy have de
clared that they are ready to let the women vote whenever a ma
jority of them shall expr< ,s a desire to do so
But is that really the last and all-sufficing word on the sub
ject ?
If only fifty per cent of the registered men ot San Francisco
voted at the recent election there, would not the whole male pop
. illation of that city run a grave risk of being disfranchised by
tJie test that Mr. Roosevelt wants to apply to women?
Has not a qualified male voter a right to v .t< -even though
the majority of male voters should stay at horn
Is not the suffrage a personal right or a ptt’.onal duty, inde
pendent of the inertness and negligence of majorities
If so, it would seem that the politicians who • :■• so r a ly to
let the women vote when the majority of-them shall say they want
to are just ducking and dodging the real issue.
The Atlanta Georgian
THE SHADOW ON THE HEARTH
By HAL COFFMAN.
1 X X- I r 3 ■’ t lo’.'i fiaimit i'j
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DOROTHY DIX WRITES
OF.
The Silly Girl W ho Is in Love W ith a Married Man
By DOIKITHY PIN
I have i letter from a silly girl
who writes:
■'! am mt\ much in love with a
married man. who talo .- m- out two
• > three tini": a week to dinners
and thi theater This man sweats
that h>- worships m-, but he says
that he do' sn't intend to get a rii
t ore*' from iris wife because it
would injure !> ! s basin*-s lie is a
doctor ind that it doesn’t want to
give up I’is children. But he says
he lavs me better titan anything
on earth. Do yea think he loves me
when ?.• :r nkly t--l’.- me that there
is no chiro' of my eve: becoming
hls w if
Do. s a man love a girl v, lien he
is <lt l>e- tt. iv ruining her good
nam' 1 f ~ i > own selfish pleasure?
Does -I man love a girl when he
pla . .. ’■••■.• in a position that he
would shoot an\ other man down
Ilk.- a d -g if he placed his own
daughter nr sister tn?
Do. > man lov. : girl when he
takes ilu m st yr-.irs of her life and
gives her nothing for them but
shame anti regret?
Dees n Man Who Can’t Marry
a Girl Really Love Her?
Pei a man love nirl when h
wins her love, knowing that he can
no' n :r-\ her, and that he is k> ■
ing her trom loving some other man
who . otil,l marrr her. and who
would give her a home and the
natural joy f woman, wifehood and
snothet hood ?
Anv girl who asks if a married
m ;n. w b.o ruthlessly offers her up
as .. icrifii--' to his passion, loves
he' is a fit inmate for an isyhim
?•' • the feeble minded. She hasn't
intelligem enough to he allowed
out in paolir. She m• ds a guard
ian, er to he locked up somewhere
iff a padded cell until sh< an take a
good long think, and estimate just
w hat sm a love is werti' the love
that brim:;' her deg'adation instead
over .nd above the fol’v and sir.
a girl commits tn pi rmitting herself
to fa ; in love with a married man
and ae ■ pting attention fiom him,
tin idioi-v ' the tiling appalls one
It shm.vs si:rh an utte r lack of intel
ligence t ■ play a game in w hich the
FRIDAY, MAY 3, 1912.
i ards are all stacked against you.
and in which you are bound to lose
out in the end. It brands one .as
such an "usy mark to be lured into
a game where one’s opponent takes
none of the risks.
For when a married-man invei
gles a girl into a love escapade he
i.n't e\en a square sport. She
tab. s all t!>" chances, In non". She
gets all the blame, all the criticism,
she loses reputation and character,
and people look at her askrnce.
They jolly him about his new con
quest, ano about being such a devil
of a fellow among the women. It's
pretty li'.mqual. isn’t it?
.And a woman's a mighty foolish,
unsophisticated, soft kind of a mush
to t.ill for it. don t you think?
How Does Giri Figure Out
Result of the Situation?
How does the girl who has an
affair witii a murried man figure
out the situation? Where does she
expect to come in? If she hopes to
gain any advantage from it she
must count on breaking up the
man'.- home, and that’s a cold
blooded piece of villainy that any
body short of a Lucretia Borgia
might step short of.
Certainly no girl with a married
man’s k:.- i on h> r lips dares t ■ kneel
down an dwhisper a prayer. She
couldn't have the qrontery to ask
God to bless her when she had
been doing the best she could to
bring sorrow on another woman’s
head and rob a wife of the one
dearest to her in life. Surely such
a giri’s dreams must be night
mares through which wail the
cries of the little children from
whom she is trying to steal their
fath.-r. •
it is an evil house, in which no
| woman lives happily or secure, that
she build.- on the wrecks of an
other woman’s home that she has
torn down. Yet if a.girl isn't plan
ning such a home for herself when
she abets a married man in being
false to his wife, what is she do
ing ’ If she doesn’t expect him to
divorce his wifi and marry her,
w hat future does she conjure up for
herself?
She knows that she is deliberate-
ly cutting herself oft from mar
riage any other man, because
there is nothing that so bespatters
a girl's garments with mud as such
an affair.
The girl may be really innocent
-of any actual wrongdoing. She
may have been more silly and sen
timental than sinning, but the mere
fact that she received a mart '• i
man’s attentions when she knew
that they were bound to compro
mise her in the eyes of the world,
and that she was willing to run
s'ch a risk, makes people inva
riably put the worst construction
possible upon her acts.
Another way in w hieh a girl s
love affair with a married man is
disastrous to her is that.it almost
always leaves her bankrupt in
heart. She has given to him all the
love, all the tenderness, all the faith
and sweetness that were in her,
and she has no more left. I have
s I n many such w;onT n, whA de
veloped into sour, disgruntled old
maids. 1 have seen many other
such women who married, and who
were weary, bored, joyless wives,
who gave a hard, cold duty to their
husbands in return for the love
that good men lavished upon .them.
Th se w omen had broken their ala
baster box at the feet of false gods,
and i bey had nothing to offer up to
the true g<>d of love.
Here Is the Acid Test
of Any Man’s Love.
I do not deny that there are real
• -
tied to . wife who is unworthy
or uncongenial, and for whom he
has no particle of affection, floes
sometimes me -t a girl who is. his
real soul mate, and for whom he
has* an ovt i-whelming love. But
such a man. inspired by a roal anrf
honest love, would die before he
would hurt the girl, or compromise
her. If his love can bring her
nothing hut sorrow, he goes away
and leaves her.
' r h. acid test of a man's lave for
a woman is whether it cherishes
ami protects her or hurts her. Try
that, girl-, when a married man
makt e lovi t< you i■tdccoii’l! semi
him sack to tne iionte where he
belongs.
THE HOME PAPER
Dr. Parkhurst’s Article
on
God’s Business Is Not
Our Business
-—and—
Cardinal Gibbons’ View
of the Disaster
Written For The Georgian
By the Rev. Dr. C. H. Parkhurst
WERE the man who some
times writes the articles
that are printed in this
column possessed of omniscience,
he would be easily able to answer
the questions put to him, includ
ing such a theological one as has
now come to him.
I will not quote the old proverb
that fools can ask questions which
philosophers can not answer, for
neither am I a philosopher and
certain correspondents are not
fools, but, on the contrary, are
usually bright and thoughtful and
honestly desirous of having their
mental difficulties met.
An inquirer writes me tonight
as follows: 'The Titanic disaster;
was it God's will? Did God steer
the iceberg toward the Titanic, or
was it another of man’s blunders?”
In some way, which no man can
precisely state, it was both.
The idea which we have of God
is not satisfied, can not be satisfied
by supposing that there is anything
in the universe of nature or in that
of history over which he does not
exercise some kind of control.
The Bible says that "His king
dom is over all. - ’, and it would not
be if there were anything left out
for which He had no responsibility.
But, while, it is well enough to
theorize about all of that. His
business is not our business.
The thing He is accountable for,
He will take care of in His own
way.
Whatever He may have had to
do with the sinking of the Titanic
man had enough to do with it to
occupy his attention, and if he had
occupied his attention with it more
closely and faithfully than he did
it would not have sunk.
God : and man constitute a kind
of co-partnership in such matters
and it is easier to theologize about
them and to dream over God’s end
of the contract than it is to attend
in a practical way to our ownend.
As soon as we are willing to set
tle down tnd be practical we have
no real difficulty with such a
matter as my correspondent pro
poses.
The officers of the Titanic were,
to this degree, responsible for the
wreck, that if they had -done what
they ought to have done, and could
have done, had kept the boat down
to a proper speed and had steered
off to the south far enough’to get
around the ice instead of going
bumping into ji the bodies that
now lie at the bottom of the Atlan
tic would be live men and women,
happy in themselves, happy in each
other and praising the Captain
AND prac-ing God for having
Justice Without Mercv
BY WINIFRED BLACK.
Did you see the story in the
paper about the girl who had
a woman arrested and put in
jail for slander?
The girl wa. young and w ell to
do—she has a good position in
some millinery shop or other, so
the paper ii.|, wears neat and
lather smart clothes, and is pretty.
She lives at home with her moth
er, brothers and sister—and she
has a sweetheart. That's what all
the trouble is about—-the sweet
heart.
The w "man who was arrested
"aid something about the girl) to
the sweetheart, and th" sweetheart
teased the girl about it, and the
girl had the woman arrested fur
slander.
Pile woman who was arrested
was almost scared to death when
the policeman came after her. She
had a husband and four little chil
dren. and the baby has been ill for
some time. The woman cried and
begged the girl to forgive her.
But the girl laughed when she
heard about the children, and
would not withdraw the charge.
So the mother left three of her lit
tle children at home alone and
went to jail, taking her baby with
her. And the girl who had her ar
rested seems to think it is all just
exactly as it should be.
Pf-.-hapi it -who knows? Per
hags the worn n with the four chil
dren talks faster and says more
tnan she should. Perhaps those
few days in jail will teach her to
bridle her tongue.
But do you know hat I w ould
do if I were the sweetheart in the
case? I w >uifl break my engage
ment with this extremely just
young person—and I wouldn’t be
her sweetheart another day- no. not
even if sh< had eyes like purple
pansies and h o ; - as blacjt as night
and a voice like dripping honey.
I wouldn't tie myself up for life
with an unforgiving nature like
tiiat for all the promises, ever made,
this Side of the Garden of Eden.
f o
reached the beautiful termination
of a lovely voyage.
So I say again, both did it, nut
so much of it as man did is all
that man need think about or busy
himself about.
We ought all of us to be glad
that one dignitary of the church,
and so eminent a one as Cardinal
Gibbons, has not hesitated to put
in crisp and unmistakable terms
the resentment excited in his ca
pacious soul by the unspeakable
horror of the Titanic's wreck,
charging it by a straight stroke to
the existing passion for luxury and
the greed of gain.
The terms employed by him lift
the entire event out of the foggy
atmosphere of uncertainty and
compromise.
A sin is half cured when it has
been characterized in language that
no one can fail to understand.
The testimony brought out at
Washington that no attention was
paid to the warning thrown down
from the crow’s nest to the cap
tain's bridge, that there was ice
ahead, along with the testimony
that the ice could have been seen
long enough in advance to avoid
disaster if the men on the lookout
had been furnished glasses (which
were asked for, but refused), seems
to put the cap-sheaf on the entire
stack of ignominious neglect.
It costs a struggle to take it all
in.
One’s nerves become so tense and
sensitive as almost to be able to
hear the combined screams and
wails that for an hour prior to the
final explosion and break-up of the
ship are described as having been
audible to those occupying the life
boats.
It is all too horrible to think
about, but it is so horrible that one
can not help thinking about it.
It is to the satisfaction of the
incensed and grieving public that
the investigating comifiission is
canvassing the situation in a man
ner so searching and so prompt and
so free from all that dilatoriness
and long-drawn-outedness that is
so apt to characterize American in
vestigations.
Notwithstanding all the sorrow,
wickedness and destruction that are
the features of this event, we must
believe that good is certain to come
out of it.
It is an awful price to pay, but
there is nothing good to be had in
this life without paying for it.
•Scripture states the fact when it
that without the shedding of
blood there is no remission.
Only let us hope, .that enough
purchase money has been already
laid down so that a second assess
ment of the same kind -will not
have to be called for.
“You are five minutes late—
where have you been? 1 ’
“What did you do with the $5 I
saw you put in your purse yes
terday
“I was looking at you when you
smiled at that girl this morning.”
“You forgot our wedding anni
versary—i shall never forgive you.''
Can t you hear those sentences
and a dozen like them come ring
ing down out of the future of the
man who marries a girl who prides
herself upon the fact that she can
not forgive?
“1 am not generous." said a wom
an I know not long ago, “but I
know I am just.”
And she. who was so proud of
being just, as she called it, turned
a helpless little girl out into the
street because the little girl had
done wrong and ought "to suffer
for it!”
Just! Oh, heart of iron, give me
no such justice!
I do not want justice for myself
nor for those I love. I want mercy
—sympathy, forgiveness—and until
I am so perfect that I need none
of these myself I pray I may never
forget to give them, and to give
them freely and with an open
heart.
So she slandered you. did she. my
high-heeled, proud young woman,
with your beauty and your youth
and your home and your friends
she, the poor little, friendless, hard
working mother? What a pity you
couldn't forgive her for it—and
make her your loving friend for
life.
Wouldn’t it have been nike if
you could have gone to the little
woman in her crowded little flat,
and taken a bit of candy for the
children and invited them all—
every one of them—to your wed
ding?
Well, you are young yet—some
day you •may look back and wish
you hadn't been qfiite so proud of
being what no doubt seems to you
"absolutely just."