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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 postofftce at Atlanta, under act of March 3, 1875
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Don’t Be in a Hurry, Young
Gentlemen'
There are many young men on earth who fail because they
lack ambition and determination to advance. There are many
more whose trouble is hasty ambition. They fail to realize their
present chances in their hurried reaching out for something better.
You may see in any club, pool room or other resort for wasting time
crowds of young men smoking and deploring their lack of success.
“I've been working three years at the same job and the
•alary,” one will say, “and 1 don’t see what chance I have, for get
ting ahead."
The young man who talks in this way does not realize that
success depends on developing the qualities which are in him. He
can develop them if he will, no matter what his place in the world.
Once he is ready to do good work, once he is developed, the work
will find him out.
When Napoleon Bonaparte was resting from his labors at St.
Helena he used to tell this story:
“One day on parade a young lieutenant stepped out of the
ranks much excited to appeal to me personally. He said to me that
he had been a lieutenant for five years and had not been able to
advance in rank. I said to him, ‘Calm yourself. I was seven years
a lieutenant, and yet you see that a man may push himself forward,
for all that.' ”
Napoleon, when he preached this lesson to the young, dissatis
fied officer, was the self-made Emperor of the French and of a great
many other nations. He had come to Paris a thin, hollow-cheeked,
undersized hoy from the conquered and despised Island of Corsica.
He stuck in the humble grade of lieutenant for seven years. When
the time came he blossomed out.
When he was lieutenant he was developing himself. He.
studied and mastered the art of war. He wrote the history of Cor
sica, and no one would publish it. He wrote a drama which was
never acted. He wrote a prize essay for the Academy of Lyons,
and did not win the prize On the contrary, his effort was con
demned as incoherent and poor in style. These were a few failures;
enough to make your ordinary young man throw up his hands and
say: “I've done all I can do; now let the world look out for me.”
Just as he became hopeful about the future, when he knew that
he had real military genius, he was dismissed from the army, and
hia career seemed to be ended. He made the thin soup upon which
he and his brother lived. He could afford to change his shirt only
once a week. He said :
“1 breakfasted off dry bread, but I bolted the door on my
poverty.”
He kept at it, and all the time, successful or otherwise, he was
developing himself. He developed into an emperor Young men
will please notice that fact, and the fact that Napoleon worked and
tried under adversity and monotony instead of grumbling
The newspaper reporter who does not get ahead very fast, the
author whose manuscripts are treated as were Napoleon's first
efforts, may study with considerable profit a young American writer
named Richard Harding Davis. That young man had been a re
porter in Philadelphia for seven years when he went to work on a
New York evening newspaper at a small salary-. Ho had written
and was writing some of his best stories, but could not get alidad,
apparently. Nevertheless, he kept on trying, and developed hiin
pelf. When other yonng men were busy talking about themselves
or deploring their lot Davis was writing and grinding away out of
working hours at the effort to get out and realize what was in him.
He succeeded
A few cases have been mentioned for young men to think
over. They are selected at random. No young man need worry
about himself so long as he can honestly say tha't he is doing his
best. Being in the same place at the same salary for seven years
can do yon no harm, if you are developing during that time what
is in you. But you may well worry if you are drifting aimlessly,
pitying yourself, making no effort. If your mind stays in the same
spot for years, that is dangerous. But don't worry about any
thing else.
; The Church and the Plague
I
This country seems to be fully in earnest over the prevention
of tuberculosis. On October 27 100.00(1 pulpits will plead to 30.-
000.000 people for cooperation with the movement against the
white plague. The age is prolific of tremendous enterprises. Fif
ty years ago who would have thought of organizing to banish
consumption from the world” Who would have thought of ban
ishing the world's house flies by destroying them”
Fifty-two thousand church communicants die even tear of
consumption, and the church i' renewing it' own spiritual and
material life by the vigor of its effort' to combat its material de
stToyer.
The Atlanta Georgian
Joy-Riding on the Back of a Sea Turtle
A Little Known Sport That Is Novel and Thrilling
rpHE mere mention of riding on
I the back of a turtle will re
tail to many the famous, nar
rative of Louis Deßougemont,
whose amazing exploits in Austra
lia, as related by himself some
years ago. marked him as b man of
keen imagination That Deßouge
mont did make a turtle trip is not
improbable, for not oniy is the
pastime practiced, bdt that it is an
amusing (not to say exciting, one
may be gathered from a descrip
tion received, together with the
above views, from a correspondent
who has indulged in this novel form
of sport in the very region in which
Deßougemont laid the scene of his
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adventures. In referring to Beak
Island off the coast of Queensland,
where this particular trip took
place, this correspondent writes
that the beach is only about 400
yards long, all the rest of the is
land being rocky.
The first operation is to catch the
turtles, which are plentifully scat
tered about the island, and turn
them over on their backs, in which
position they are perfectly helpless.
When one learns that these animals
weigh from two to three hundred
weight, it Is not surprising that
considerable knack it required to
do this, but the neatest and quick- .
est way, it is explained, is to grab
the turtle from behind and tip It
over its head. As soon as a trip
is arranged the turtles—as many
as are required are turned over,
and, finding themselves on their
feet once more, they make for the
sea with the men on their backs,
who, when in about a foot of water,
squat on the animals, holding on to
them where the coat collar ought
to be.
The correspondent says; "It is
The Utilization of V acant Lots for the
Benefit of the V ery Poor
HAVE you ever seen a little
chiltL born and reared in a
tenement house?
Do you realize how many such
children exist in our great cities
and how they are living under as
unnatural conditions as plants
growing in a cellar?
Have you ever wondered as you
went about the big cities and saw
acres and acres of unused land
right within the city limits to whom
this land belonged?
And why it was idle?
Some of dur billionaires became
billionaires because tills land was
allowed to lie vacant without being
taxed to any extent until it rose to
a fabulous price through the growth
of the city.
Now it has come to the minds of
good people that many of these va
cant lots might be utilized for the
benefit of the very poor who have
no privileges of sunlight and fresh
air. and that the little children
growing up in our great cities
might be helped by some co-opera
tive efforts along these paths of
procedure.
The International Children's
School Harm league is one of the
results of these ideas.
Here is Its declaration of pur
pose: "To Promote and Unify a
World-Wide Interest in Children’s
Gardens."
Seven Ways It
Will Create Interest.
By assisting in starting children s
gardens in suitable parks and va
cant lots.
By assisting in starting gardens
in connection with schools, until
boards of education become con
vinced of their value anti take over
their maintenance.
Rv assisting in starting gardens
in connection with hospitals and
institutions tor children who are
mentally or physically weak or de
ficient
Ry urging th, employment ~f
teachers trained tor children s gar
den work.
MONDAY. AUGUST 12. 1912.
The top picture
shows three
racers lining up
for a turtle race
off the Queens
land coast.
The center pic
ture shows pre
liminary prepa
rations for a
turtle trip, the
riders riding on
the backs of the
turtles down to
the sea.
The shell of the
turtle, which is as
broad as it is
long, affords a
flat surface on
which to stand as
the animal makes
its way to sea.
The bottom pic
ture shows the
start of one of
the racers
The extraordinary
expression of the
lurtle is quite
normal.
difficult at first to balance proper
ly. and the first few we tried lit
erally turned turtle on top of us.
' whereupon we loosed our hold of
them pretty hurriedly and made off
in another direction as, although
the turtle is harmless enough if
handled with care, it has a beak
which would shame a parrot of the
same lighting weight, and we had
By ELLA WHEELER WILCOX.
Copyright, 1912, by International News Service
By establishing a training school
for such teachers.
By exhibiting models and pic
tures of the work for the infor
mation of the public.
By maintaining a bureau of In
formation and advice on how to
start and conduct children's gar
dens; furnishing lectures, printed
matter, photographs and lantern
slides.
No matter how large or small the
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# ELLA WHEELER WILCOX.
number, each child has his or her
< wn garden, on which he or she
does all the work. A new interest
and sense of responsibility comes
with ownership, arousing the forces
of ambition and developing at
once the need of property protec
tion Often it is their first under
standing of the ights of property
owners, and this awakening of the
civic sense of protection is to have
a tremendous influence
They spread fertilizer, spade,
’ake. plant, hoe. water, weed and
harvest. Worthy work well done
is always dignified, and the worker
dignifies it The child must be
shown how to do the work well,
arouse hi- labor-saving intelli
gence and open his mind to the
I forces of the elements that are
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-to neslrc for the beast to try it
on us.
"No one seems to know," lie goes
on to say, “what brand of turtle
these are; they are used for soup,
but I do not think they arc the
proper green turtle —if they are’ it
is rather tantalizing to see forty
odd on the beach worth about $l5O
apiece in New York."
serving his intelligent activity, and
he will never question the dignity
of labor that arouses intelligence
and that fills him with pride over
the product.
Children's gardens conducted on
this plan have spaces reserved for
varieties of products grown
throughout the country, so bring
ing the children to the larger prob
lems of the nation.
There is much work to be done in
the garden outside of the child's
plot. Just as every community has
public works chat must be attend
ed to, so the children must con
tribute their services to the gen
eral welfare of the whole garden.
And in this work they learn of
broom corn, flax, wheat, cotton
and other wonderful plants that are
so important to the world.
To Develop Courage to
Grasp Opportunities.
To preserve the neatness of the
garden the children are taught to
gather stones and trash. load
wheelbarrows and wheel them
away, in doing this, and in keep-
ing in order the paths over which
the loads must be wheeled, they
learn in simple, effective manner
to think about one of the greatest
aids to civilization— transportation.
The way in which the question of
good roads can be brought to chil
dren in a garden will make them
think more and more of the fact
that "all production is transporta
tion." and that as all material pro
duction the result of moving
things, so all material wealth is the
result of moving things economi
cally. that they may be worth more
after they are moved they
were before
The widespread use of gardens
in the education of children will be
a tremendous force in hastening
the people to a better use of the
land. Eor all the people must know
something about the subject to in
telligently elect representatives
who are to act for them in public
matters, and to respond when ac
tion is taken
THE HOME PAPER
Dr. Parkhurst’s Article
on
Living by Rule or Living
by Impulse
—and—
The Difference Between
Them
Written For The Georgian
By the Rev. Dr. C. H. Parkhurst
AN editorial writer has sug
gested to Mr. Stokes, the
wealthy candidate for the
mayoralty of Stamford and a So
cialist, that if he wants to do some
thing for the poor he had better
turn his property into dollars and
distribute the proceeds of sale
among the needy.
It is disappointing that, at this
stage of the game, when so many
sensible things have been said
about ameliorating the conditions
of the less favored classes, a man
should be found who, while posing
as an oracle, should recommend to
Mr. Stokes a policy of amelioration
so stupidly inadequate.
Supposing that all the property
in the country were converted into
cash and the resulting funds ex
pended in an equable per capita
distribution, where would the poor
people, as well as the rich ones, be
at the end of a month? Dollars
are necessary, but dollars are not
what amelioration is made of.
The man who initiated Christian
civilization was not a millionaire,
■ but was so poor that when it came
time for him to pay his poll tax he
had to have one of go
fishing in order to raise the neces
sary funds.
1 am not blinking the fact that
the poor ought to have more
money: but more money is not the
chief nor the fundamental thing.
Money Is Lubricant,
Not Motive Power.
Money is the lubricant that makes
the machinery run easily, but it Is
not the motive power that drives
the machine.
An editorial writer in The Inter
national Railroad Employee, ad
dressing railroad operatives, says:
“You seldom, if ever, give any se
rious thought to bettering your
condition, except by hoping for bet
ter wages. Your ideals begin and
end with wages, and. so long as
that be true there is no possibility
of your condition being bettered.
Mr, Stokes will not fool with his
money, but presumably will lay it
out, not in filling men’s pockets,
but in improving men themselves
and adding to their equipment and
thus Qualifying them to fill their
own pockets.
There are two ways of living;
one is living by rule, the other is
living by impulse. There is a wide
and important difference between
tire two, and I should be pleased if
every one reading this article would
understand what that difference is
and how great and serious it is.
The person who acts by impulse
does what at any given moment he
feels like doing; while the one who
lives by rule acts according to cer
tain established laws that he has
deliberately laid down for himself.
Os course, it is natural and a deal
easier and pleasanter to do alw'ays
exactly what we feel like doing, and
if our feelings were always right it
would, be altogether safer to do so,
and perhaps there are some whose
dispositions are so fine and so
steadily fine that what they want
to do will always be the thing that
it is proper and wise for them to
Letters From the People
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HONOR FOR MRS. LONGSTREET
Editor The Georgian:
I wish to express, through the
columns of your paper, the senti
ments of those women of our state
who appreciate and esteem Mrs
Helen D. Longstreet in her admir
able and unparalleled struggle to
cohserve. for immemorial genera
tions, the scenic beauty of Tallulah
Falls. Her combat has been Na
poleonic. so invincible has she
been; but so far she has not met
her Waterloo
Now that the legislature has
urged that Governor Brown bring
suit for the conservation of the
falls, the climax of her fight Is not
far off, and we can only hope with
Mrs. Longstreet that she wins. Ts
she does win there should be erect
ed to her a monument as big and
K-O
Ml
do. But at any rate there are not
many people of that kind.
Example of Vessel
Crossing the Atlantic.
If a sailing vessel is crossing the,
Atlantic it would save the sailors a
great deal of trouble and hard work
to let her go as she pleases: and If
the wind were blowing from the
right quarter and continued to blow
from the same quarter without any
veering, then the vessel might be
left to herself to go her own way
and she would arrive tn port all
right.
But winds do not usually work
In that way.
Some of the time they come from
the east and some of the time from x
somewhere else and everywhere
else. Very much like a man’s dis
position the wind is.
Therefore, the captain has to lay
down a line for the vessel to run
upon and hold her to that line.
That is to say, the vessel must sail
by rule and not by vmpulre
Almost all people do lay down
rules for themselves and some of
the time they follow them, but once
in a while impulse starts up, a sud
den desire seizes theiji, and the rule
is broken and goes all to pieces.
Everything in nature goes by
rule. The earth revolves by rule;
the trees leaf and blossom by rule.
If the world about us acted only
by impulse, everything would be
shattered inside of 24 hours: the
winds would tear up the forests,
the hills would tumble into the
lakes and the stars would bump
into each other and the sky be full
of the flinders.
It may not have occurred to the
reader that uhat I h»v* just been
saying has a very direct applica
tion to the present political situa
tion. Opinions today are of two
sorts.
One sort Is that of people who
want to have government admin
istered by rule, and the other opin
ion Is the one held by those who
would like to see it administered
by impulse.
Mr. Roosevelt stands for the Im
pulsives. He is the victim of his
momentary fancies and preferences.
Colonel Roosevelt
“Is Like a Colt.”
He is like an unbroken colt that
looks upon a fence not as some
thing intended to keep him in, but
as something put up for him to
Jump over.
The whole tendency of his influ
ence is to persuade the masses that
it is their rightful privilege to do
as they may at any time they
feel like doing, irrespective of law
and constitution. .He | s without
reverence for what Is established.
If he built a. boat he would leave
out the anchor. If he created a tree
he would skip the roots.
If he were to originate a state he
would put himself at the head of it,
of course, and dispense with all
constitution except such as the peo
ple would make up as they went
along. And that is the kind of per
son to whom a good many people
would like to commit the shaping
of our national life and the guard
ianship of its interests.
as high as old Yonah—not after
she is dead and gone, but NOW.
And the WOMEN of Georgia ought
to do it
(MRS.) ( LARA M'KINNEY ED-
WARDS.
Clarkesville. Ga.
“MOTHER’S WORK"
Editor The Georgian:
Dorothy Dix certainly under
stands human nature. I am very
fond of reading her articles in The
Georgian. She writes from a won
derful fund of information and she
writes convincingly. I was struck
by the great truth she set forth in
the article on "Mother’s Work#”
which appeared in yesterday s pa- x
per. i wish that every mother could
read it. It would do a world of
800d ’ R. B. T.
Atlanta, Ga.