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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 nostoffwe at Atlanta, under act of March 3. 1873.
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Payable in advance.
The Democratic Nominee
and the Progressive Creeds
Woodrow Wilson, governor of New Jersey, is the nominee of
the national Democratic convention for president of the lulled
States.
The Georgian will support the Democratic nominee.
The Georgian, as a progressive Democratic newspaper, would
have supported any progressive Democrat nominated at Baltimore.
The Georgian has not only been a progressive. Democratic
newspaper always, but it has been a progressive Democratic news
paper in advance of the Democratic party, and it will continue to
be a progressive newspaper in advance of the party.
Whatever is progressive in the nominee of this convention, and
in the platform of this convention, this newspaper will indorse.
For anything less than progressive in the nominee or in the plat
form The Georgian will feel and express its regret, and will en
deavor to strengthen and amend the weakness in platform or in
candidate as the campaign progresses.
Because The Georgian and its kindred newspapers are con
vinced that the only true Democracy is progressive Democracy.
The Georgian does not hesitate to say, and has already earnest
ly said, that there were many things in the Baltimore convention
far from progressive and far from democratic. The spirit of the
convention and its methods are made open to attack upon many
lines, and. most of all, in the overriding by demagogy and other
influences of the will of the majority, which is the will of Ihe people
and the essence of Democracy.
We have made, and shall continue to make, the improper meth
ods and the undemocratic spirit of this Democratic, national con
vention and of the Republican national convention a con
tinuous and double-barreled argument for the abolition of
national conventions in both parlies and the substitution
everywhere of direct nominations—preferential presidential pri
maries. which will do away with conventions and allow the people
to choose all officers, from president down, directly by their own
will and their own ballots.
This is the essential lesson learned and the essential reform
made necessary by the errors and iniquities of both national con
ventions.
The circumstances and conditions surrounding the nomination
of Governor Wilson furnish the amplest vindication of Champ
Clark from the assaults and misrepresentations of Governor Wil
son's friend, Bryan. Because the very influences about which Bry
an made his demagogic assault upon Champ ('lark were identically
the same influences which'al. the appointed time brouiiht about
the nomination of Woodrow Wilson
There is only one thing that is rankling in Ihe hearts of Clark
men, and that is the false accusations, or insinuations, that have
been made against Mr. Clark.
It was said by Mr. Clark’s opponents that Mr. Clark's man
agers had made deals with the interests. Those insinuations were
not only false, but they were not made in good faith.
A simple analysis of Ihe vote will show that it was ihe states
which the interests controlled that prevented Mr. Clark from get
ting the nomination, and that it. always has been the determination
of the interests to interfere at any cost with the nomination of Mr.
Clark.
The states which Thomas Fortune Ryan controlled were the
states instructed for Mr. Underwood. Those states were withheld
at the time when their votes could have given Mr. Clark the nom
ination. and they were released at the time when their voles could
and did give ATr. Wilson the nomination.
Both Mr. Wilson and Mr. Underwood have had abundant
money at their command, and it is well known that Mr. Clark made
his campaign throughout the country and won the greatest number
of delegates in the presidential primaries with a pitiful fund of a
few thousand dollars contributed by personal friends.
To say that a man conducted such a campaign was or could bo
the candidate of the interests is not only an unjust and unworthy
reflection upon a stainless public man. but is also a reflection upon
the common sense and intelligence of the American people.
And to say that the nomination of Governor Wilson was tinallv
made possible by the support of Taggart in Indiana and of Ryan
in Virginia and Sullivan in Illinois and Tammany in New York is
not a reflection upon Governor Wilson, but is an all sufficient vin
dication ot the slandered speaker of the Democratic house.
The one man upon whom the final support of the interests for
Governor Wilson does reflect most directly and seriously and per
manently is William J. Bryan.
Bryan, just at the moment when the transfer of the New York
delegates from Harmon to Champ Clark gave Champ ('lark the
majority of Ihe convention's votes and fully entitled him to the
nomination—that moment William J. Bryan set out to defeat his
noble, loyal friend. Champ Clark.
Bryan brazingly declared that he would support no man voted
for by New York or whose nomination was made possible bv Yew
V ork s vote; broke his pledged instructions from Nebraska, turned
his votes to Wilson and halted Champ Clark's march to victory.
Mark the hypocrisy of Bryan,
The next day Tom Taggart, the most corrupt of all bosses,
swung Indiana's vote to Wilson and turned the tide that finally
made Wilson possible
And Bryan, sullen. ineons'---»nt ami insincere, sat silent and
unprotesting in his seat.
It was the action of the Yew York delegation, led bv Congress
man Fitzgerald, of Tammany, which made Wilson's nomination
certain.
Ami Bryan, who had betrayed and defeated (’hamp ('lark,
as he said, simply because Yew V ork had voted for him, sal silent,
sullen and insincere— without a protest in his seat!
And when Roger Sullivan, whom Bryan had denounced a
traitor and a train robber, swu.ip' the 58 votes of Illinois and made
Wilson s election sure. Bryan >h!l sat without protest at a change
of vote sullen, silent alul ii ■ IIH-I re to the end
Whoever‘else may ri>< >r fall in the fortunes of the last con
vention of ihe Democrat ie part;.. William J Bryan comes out of it
stained lor< v<". and stamped Io his hypocrisy and his hates as a
fraud and a demagogue, false n lnngua_" . false in profession am!
tals< in friendship as to part}
The real reason for < hamp ' lark defeat w;i- the realilv and
genuineness of his progresdxe Democracy
While others theorized Speaker ('hamp ( lark struck with
force and deadly directness at th> root of fh< < vil
To th. pr.-aebers <>f progressive ItefiHu i ,o-y li< ..m practical
Continued in L ant Column
The Atlanta Georgian
THURSDAY. JULY 4, 1912. >
THE REAL SKY ROCKET
By HAL COLEMAN.
'• ' '• MWJRIFW -I
HF/
WwW ill
|g I
z/ T I,'#/’ /'
zzfjf W/S- 1 /
Landing on the Lockjaw Germ
How Science and Sense Are Helping to Save the Small Boy and His Fingers.
By JOHN BESSNER HUBER. M. D.
EVERY Independence day for
more than a century and a
quarter past we and our fa
thers before us have been twisting
the British Lion's tali.
Possibly the twisting has hurt
that gigantic feline some; but there
is no doubt but what it has hurt us
a great deal mote. For every
Fourth of July since our glorious
Revolution we have had more of
our people killed and wounded, by
reason of the way we celebrate,
than there were casualties in our
whole seven years war with old
Mother England.
Don’t 'calculate our maiming? and
killings by fireworks in all the
years since 1783, when our war for
American independence ended tri
umphantly for us: and don't calcu
late such misfortunes throughout
the length and breadth of our
whole land in all these year.--. But
consider only such losses in the
three years, 1907, 1908 and 1909.
and those only in New York city;
and we find a tolal of 1,339 killed
and injured in and around the
.Glorious Fourth from fireworks -
more than the casualties in the
Revolutionary battles of Lexington.
Bunker Hill. Fort Moultrie, White
Plains. Fort Washington, Mon
mouth <nd Cowpens combined. And
these losses of ours have mainly
been not among fighting men, who
expect to be butt or killed, but
aiming youths and maids (almost
all under eighteen» ami little chil
dren.
And the sufferings of tile-, |>ov s
and girls and little children that
have died have been among the
most agonizing known to medical
science; whilst of those who have
not died many have been maimed
and disfigured for life.
Startling Figures.
In the six years ending with 19'"’,k
our people throughout these United
States gave up a festive offering in
boner of the bi: th of our freedom
nearly 30.000 killed and injured by
fireworks ,"9..'96 pounded tor the
surgeon to take care of and 1,316
for the undertakv r. 776 of those
deatun being front lockjaw. In the
nine years since 1903 the equal in
numbers of m..>. than 39 regi
ment? wore l:i M .a nr injured in
celebrating our Glorious Fourth.
Slm . 1003 the-• <!• < i.'ful mb fm
tones have been 1 ■enfng 'mar bv
...It beaus, of the ea utpHIIEII -In •
stltufeil by the Vti.'ii. tn Medical
t oti.ilimi, and wage.l bv the pub
lic pros- and .-m u aetlvlti. s i the
flu . I S .u'' !- iiii.'u I lon '.’ear l.v
year eitlzeti' uiiil ■ •ommunftivs :it*
more and mote -e.dng th* light,
Yet 1. -t y. , I1? 11 it> t,•v <r. n'l
. fgltt. -ell . ~f. s of Im !>,|.i .1 \||d be
pith ■ th* <■ mi m. th* If at i< fort . •
seven deaths —eleven killed out
right by firearms, nine by powder
explosives, bombs or torpedoes, five
by cannon, two by giant fire
crackers, and eight by blood
poisoning. life explosion of chemi
cals and so forth.
The most deaths last year from
any one cause were twelve (includ
ed in the forty-seven just mention
ed). nearly all little girls, burned
to death like human torches in the
lint • of Nero, by fireworks, in sev
eral cases of the “harmless" kind,
small firecrackers and even "spark
lers.”
What Is Lockjaw?
But what is lockjaw?
The doctors call it tetanus. It is
a germ disease, and the germ .s the
tetanus bacillus. This germ is found
in earth and sometimes in putrefy -
ing fluids. The reason why there
are not more deaths from lockjaw
is that the germ fortunately will
not thrive in .he presence of air,
but only in wounds that are closed
up and devoid of the oxy gen tn the
air. When this germ gets lodg
ment in a wound it generates poi
sons (toxins, the doctors call them),
which circulate in the lymph and
blood channels and thus produce
the dreadful symptoms of the dis
ease.
So lockjaw happens whenever
any dirt or blank cartridge wails,
or paper from a giant firecracker
or a rag containing the germ, is
introduced into the wounds —espv -
•jally wounds of the head, lace am!
hands. The wound may be very
slight, nothing more than the
set aped skin or a slight burn; yet
the germ may find lodgment in a
microscopic pocket beneath the
skin.
Great and open wounds do not
so much result in lockjaw, bee tuse
the germ will not thrive in open
wounds, and because great wounds
are taken at once to the doctor,
whilst slight and seemingly inno
cent wounds tire either disregaided
" managed by household surgery.
Tie'. >s an "incubation period’’
in lockjaw, this is the time bctwei n
tin introduction of tin germ in
•he wound ami the <’,< velopmem of
the sy aptoms which announce
lite df-etin . this ncubation period
is from five to fifteen days.
Then come rite heartrending
symptoms, ("hills and high fever,
rapid heart beat profust sweat
ing. rigidity of the neck ami jaw.
a dreadful appearant e of grinning
or smiling difficulty in t h, wing or
swallowing and in breathing, mat*
v tllar spasms ami formation • f the
"bridge" a < urvature of the boil*
re-ling on tin back of too head ami
tin heels from th*' Inflammation m
.h< : pin*' \ml think of all t fi. ...
agonies In a lltth 1 hild.
Up to very recent y ears death al
ways ended these sufferings. There,
was really no remedy at all until
the appearance of tetanus antitox
in.
And how are we going to prevent
this terrible. “patriotic lockjaw”—
this “Independance day tetanus?”
The first thing to do is to forbid
fireworks to children. But especial
ly the toy pistol (in which the
blank cartridge is fired), and which
is the most frequent cause of lock
jaw; the giant firecracker, which
is the next most frequent cause of
lockjaw,, and also the toy cannon,
firearms, powder and the bomb—all
of which have caused lockjaw.
What To Do.
Then, for any wound, however
slight, a doctor must be summoned.
Heroic surgery "is the only way to
treat, such n wound.” There must
be free incision under cocaine or a
general anesthetic. The wound
must be enlarged, if necessary. All
"pockets" in which the germ might
lodge must be prevented. Every
particle of dirt, or other “foreign
matter." such as a rag or a wad,
must be removed. The wound must
then be cauterized by a 23 per cent
solution of carbolic acid in alco
hol or glycerine. There must be a
loose, wet boric avid dressing,
changed every day. The wound
must be kept invariably open and
allowed to heal up from the bot
tom.
But most important of all. an
immunizing dose of tetanus anti
toxin (1,500 units) must be inject
ed by the physician. A timely in
jection. made immediately or very
soon after tile injury, will almost
certainly protect the body against
the development of lockjaw. The
real failures from this remedy have
been because ill* injection was not
made until after the appearance of
the symptom:
Help at Hand.
Yet this tetanus antitoxin should
be used at any time, for it has in
some cases been found curative,
which no other remedy has ever
b>> ( r, for this disv ae*-'. when fuiiv
dev- 10p.'.l Fr.lv tleaily all health
departments, state and municipal.
■ I’o" ‘'p ii on Ipdv 0.-mieii, , d.-v
--anil have this antitoxin ready for
immvdi.it> use by physicians. hos
pitals and dispensaries on tele
phone application.
We a i- now substituting tne safe
ami sane I’ourth (without fire
works) tot the old, bloody, harba
r m ■ vml insane Fourth. The small
hoy till be deprived if a lot
t’lti. but he w 111 save :c_. fingers ‘mil
" ■ ■ aml ji..esil_.lv hi* ofc.
whiv h I.* much gmatei fun after all.
THE HOME PAPER
Dorothy D i x
\ v rites
—ox— Wti
To Marry or Not '
to Marry
..
Question for the
Individual
> Only
DOROTHY DIX.
Bv DOROTHY DIX
A SENSIBLE, tevel -headed girl
writes me the following let
ter:
“I am twenty-pix years old. in
business and earn a good salary.
I am successful in my occupation
and much liked by my employer
and fellow workmen, but I am not.
pretty, and. therefore, do not at
tract men. although 1 have a host
of friends of my own sex. Now,
my mother is very much worried
because I am not married and
harasses me by continually urging
matrimony upon me. She seems
to think it little short of a disgrace
for a girl of my age not tn be mar
ried.
"I have no scruples against mar
rying. In fart. I should like to mar
ry if the'right man came along,
and there are times when I heartily
yvish that I had a husband and a
little home of my own and the In
dependence they give a woman,
but. I certainly have scruples
against a man unless I love him.
Fears Constant Nagging
May Drive Her to Marriage.
“So far as I can see T am in no
way an object of pity, and I en
joy my work, make a comfortable
income and have all the privileges
of the bachelor maid, yet my moth
er makes m.v life a burden to me
yvlth tier nagging about my marry
ing. and all of my girl friends yvho
are married or engaged look at me
with contempt and compassion and
'ooor Mary’ me for being single un
til I feel that I will be
driven Into matrimony in self
defense.
“What do you think of it? Is
there any reason a self-supporting
young woman should marry unless
she yvants to?"
The situation in yvhleh my corre
spondent finds herself is one in
yvhleh millions of other women have,
been placed before her. but for
them there was no way out. while
for her there is the open door If
she only has the courage to use
It. The woman of the past tvhose
family' and friends decided that it
was time for her to be settled in
life was compelled to leap from
the home frying pan. when it got
too hot to be comfortable into the
fire of an undesired marriage.
Rut the young woman of today
who is self-supporting is dtlven to
no such desperate alternative. If
her friends and parents make her
fee! that she encumbers the family
hearthstone, all she needs do is to
pack her trunk and go. And if she
is wise she does so. instead of let
ting herself be fretted to death by
the continual interference of others
in in affair so purely persona' as
marriage. Not even a mother has
The Democratic Nominee
I and the Progressive Creeds
Continued from First Column.
illustration of what he meant when he stayed at his post, and
from his seat ot authority as speaker start d the investigation of
the Steel Trust and the Money Trust, representing not hundreds
ot millions, but thousands of millions of dollars—-an ineoneeiva , 'i*
power of money.
I hi' investigation of the Steel Trust and the Money Trust -nt
• I Pierpont Morgan and W. hi. Corey to Europe, where they li;>vr
toned it convenient to stay, and the vast forces which Morgan at 1
< orey controlled, with the kindred interests which surround them,
made up their minds that whoever else was nominated at Pal -
more must not be, and should not be. the great, practical progres
sive in the speaker's chair at Washington.
• Il does not follow and we do not believe that Governor \\ il>"U
made any deal or had any understanding with the interests win t
finally secured his nomination.
I pou this belief in Governor Wilson’s innocence of any
motion with these evil forces, we are going Io support him •
this election.
But while we do this, we need not forget to honor and 1
eulogize that great Missouri Democrat who was by flv'se iut»*t<
made tlw martyr for his real progressive Democracy.
a right to put a finger in that pk.
It's hands off for everybody, except,
the individual concerned in mat
ter s of the lieart.
Why mothers, who presuma.br ■
love their daughters and have (heir
interests at. heart, should be so
crazy for thrfir girls to marry i
one of the mysteries past finding
out. Certainly few women have
been so blessed in their own mar
ilages as to lead them to think
matrimony an elysium. On th
contrary most of them have found
it a hard road to travel, full of
disillusions, and disappointment--,
and privations, and sorrow, and
tears: yet, in spite of their own
experience, and the observation
that they have fared no worse than
the great majority of wives anti
mothers they see about them, they
eager to set their datighter'B
feet on this thorny path.
So we see mothers urging their
daughters to marry, and so anxious
to see them married they do not
look too particularly at the man.
We see them so afraid their daugh
ters won’t marry that thty plunge
little young, unfit girls into matri
mony. and when a. girl does have
enough sense not to take the first
man who proposes to her. but
w'aits to pick and choose around
among men until she can find wbai
she wants In a husband, we ob
serve her mother getting as fidgetv
as an old hen who is trying to
cluck and shoo her chick into th”
coop at night, fearful lest she
might get left out of the fold.
Os course, where a girl is de
pendent on her family it is easy to
see where her mother might want
to shunt the burden of her support
on some man. but where a younc’
woman earns her own bread and
butter, and cake, and even con
tributes to her parent’s larder,
there is no possible excuse for her
mother to marry off.
Cruel to Force Girl to Altar
Steps Unless She Loves.
There is just one thing, and on»
tiling only, that makes ma •
worth while, and that is love- i
love so great and overwhelming
that It robs sacrifice of its stin,.
labor of its weariness, and niak -
a woman glad to give all and do ad
for the sake of the man she v i
ships. Unless a girl feels thi- "
toward a.\ man. she is wrong and
foolisli to marry him, and when
she docs feel this way she won't
need her mother to urge and push
her into matrimony.
.•'.nd when she doesn't feel ihl.’
w ay it is a hard and cruel thing of
' her mother to try to force on >'■ >'
brow a wreath of orange bios>i>m?
that are full of thorns.