Atlanta Georgian. (Atlanta, Ga.) 1912-1939, August 30, 1912, LATE SPORTS, Image 14

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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 ue at Atlanta, under act of March 3. 1R73 Subscription I’rice—Delivered by carrier. 10 cents a week. By mall, |. r a year. Payable In advance. It Is a Good Thing For This I Country to Have at Least One Man and One Set of Newspapers Not Afraid to I'ell the Truth. r r r The Archbold-Standard Oil Penrose-Foraker Revelations Made by W R. Hearst in Hearst’s Magazine Have Been Most Valuable to the Citizens of This Country. There is ;i good Italian saying “Give Light, and the People Will Find the Way. ' The light that the people need is inlorination, FACTS, insight into their governineiit and espeeia lit into 1 hat which is hidden. While facts arc hidden, the people can not find their way. If it were not for the newspapers that are truthful, and for a few men that do not fear the truth or those that hate it. there would be little light for the people, and little hope of finding the path in the maze of graft, corruption, monopoly, bribery ami dishonest control of gov ernment through which this nation is wandering. Our readers certainly appreciate the value of publicity and the value of 1 ruth telling. They have built up the Hearst newspapers, and tin Hearst magazines they constitute the millions of circula tion, the gigantic family of readers from which W. IE Hearst gets the power to scat ter truth, and to frighten rascals. The polities ot this country and the prospect of good govern ment owe a great debt Io that revelation of Standard Oil activity, bribery ami shameless corruption, managed by John I). Archbold, and shared by Penrose, Foraker, Sibley and others supposed to be working for the people. Foraker has been driven out of public life. Penrose will soon be out of public life. Archbold, when he understands what the people think of him either through criminal proceedings or other wise- will cease Ins activities, his cheek distribution, his insolent attempts to interfere with elections, his shameless corruption of the people’s oflieials. Even the newspapers naturally dishonest the .socalled “con | s native newspapers that belong to Archbold, just as Foraker i and Penrose belong to him. have been compelled through very shame to publish the facts with which Hearst has supplied them. As they will be compelled to publish the further facts with which he has supplied them. ) In his recent cable from Europe W. R Hearst advised Penrose, Archbold and Ihe ot hers to tell Ihe whole I rut h promising t hat 11E would do it if they did not. Mr. Hearst has “given the people light.” He has shown them j which ot their officials were rotten and dishonest. He has pointed i out and convicted the Trust managers, guilty of wholesale bribery; he has rendered a great service to this country through his news papers and his magazines, ami the people know it. Mr. Hearst’s work has been of especial value because his revela tions have been absolutely non-partisan. Democrat, liepublican, Progressive, or what not, has made no difference to him. The truth as fast as possible has been given to the public. And through the Hearst publications the public has learned that dishonesty in this country is no party. IT MANAGES AND BIT'S EVERY PARTY. Mr. Howe, in Vermont, reminding the people that railroads and other corporations rule and cheat by paying in taxes less than half what individual citizens pay. describes part of our system admirablv as follows: Now. ladies ami g. ntb :n. n. Is that a square deal? Was that law enact-al by th.- R.-pubiiean party" No. no. Was It enacted by the Dem ocratic party.’ No, no. Was It enacted by any political party? Nd, no Whom was it emu ted by ’ It was enacted by the crooked politi clans who are centre '«■>! by the <-<» porations. Was It enacted in the daytime? Oh. no Was it enacted on cold water? Oh, no; they had better stuff than that. Hoc long have we been living undei that law? Twenty-six years That is a good description of ihe way things arc managed in th is count ry. I lit gra 11. Ihe d ishoiiost v. amlt he monopoly are not I), •uoei.i.lic. they .- mu I.' -public; qi THEY AR E F.N( 1.1 SI VEI, Y AND ESSENTIALLY I’I.ITOCRATIi'. Men like Archbold supp'} tlo- money, the funds for corruption Men like Foraker. I’cnr. and Sibley take this monev and use it some of it being distributed “in th.- right places” ami some of it being carefully kept. llumlreds of tliousauds ;nd mlll i. os have thiis been tlisf rilmted by the corporations that rob th.- people through monopoly. But there promises to coni, an eml. or at least a moderation, in this system thanks to “the light “ -.riven by the publications rliat \V. R Hearst emit rois. There is not a mile of territory in the I’nited States that does not know ihe name and the work of Ibarst and his publications This causes envy among some editors. But it need cause no envv. They may have the same standing, and the same power for good, if they w ill de\ clop Ihe ability to discover the 1 ruth AN 1 > THE HONESTY TO TELL I 1 ’ The Atlanta Georgian THE CRUSHING BURDEN < Copyright, 1912, by International News Service I 1 / j - EEL— ( I I i ■ wllffiS > i W I ■: f H ; TJ i T i j t H 'w. • iZtri Z’ >- i W//m I' L-Ed-F- ; Sri £4,% '' W W\\ M |: T’' M wll ) ■ I lx _“■' \ ( " I “ ' -" - —I - ( •’ ‘ 1 1 I 7. ~ *" - ~ • • I— s* ■ § *— - 1 ' i $ $ Keeping Accounts & & \MAN who is a metliodie i l, careful, business-like per on, trained to business accuracy, complains bitterly that he can not make his wife keep books. He makes her a generous allow ance. anil he holds that it is his right that she should make an ac counting to him showing where every penny went, and because she i ■ fuses to do this there is endless bickering and quarrelling between Hie two. Theoretically, I agree with the husband. Personally. I side with the wife. For myself. I had rather do a day's washing than add up a e damn of figures, and it lias always seemed to me that when money is spent it is just as muc h gone whether you bought ice cream soda or coined beef and cabbage with it. However, 1 am quite aware that this Is no proper way to view the subject, and I am sure that those who look over their account books where every item of expenditure is rigorously set down, and see how tin y w isted a quarter for cigars here, and fifteen cents for drinks there, and a nickel for chocolate c i 'ants in another place, and a dol lar and a half for a neck fixing somewhere else, must get a day of judgment jolt that is good for their souls and makes for economy. < < r t duly we never realize how much money we fool away until our ex travagances rise up from our little ac count book and confront us it Makes For Thrift. I’ndoubtedly the account book makes for thrift and judicious man agement. One of the first tilings that they teach girls In the school of domestic science is the necessity for having a houselndd budget in which tin 1 expenses of running t family are proportioned and a cer tain per cent of the income set apart for rent, ano food, and cloth ing. and sickness, and amusements, and so on. It is easy to see how much better and more Intelligently a woman can manage a household who goes about it in this systematic manner, and whose accurately kept books show her just where she stands, titan she can if she adopts the hit-or miss style of family financiering. where 1 it's always a feist or a fam ine and the first of the month in variably finds het appalled at the size of the bills. It is frequently -aid that if any i business man conducted hts affairs FRIDAY. AUGUST 30, 1912. Uy DOROTHY DIX in as slap-dash a m inner as his wife does hers le would land in the bankruptcy coin: irsidi- of a year. Doubtless this is trip It is one of the greatest Injustices done women that girls ate rar ly trained to busi ness methods m cv, i given any money to handle, so that w hen they conic to.- pend their husband's earn ings they do not know how to do it to the la st advantage. Nor do they take kindly to being taught business methods when their husbands try to instruct them, as in the ease of the man < red at the be ginning of this artit le. (>n the con trary. when a husband tries to in duce' his wife to I. ■ p books she is apt to accuse hr i of penuriousness in the matter of money. The- wife is wrong in this. Inas much as marriage I- a partnership in which the hush; nd supplies the' money for running the home, and the woman does the active work of making the home, it is nothing more than fair that tin wife should keep a record of the funds that pass through her hands and be able to give an account of her stewardship. Ho has a perfect right to know how his money is used and whether it is wasted or not. Partners in business who are managing different ends of an en terprise look ovi r each other's ac e mats, and there is no reason w hy a wife should fee! miffed if her husband wants to take a peek at her expense book and find out how she' is conducting her department. If every married woman would k ep an accurate account of every e nt that she sp. nt mi the family anil not only permit her husband to see it. but force him to audit her bool s .-very month, it would not only bo .1 good thing economically, but it would !»’ an eye opener to tb.e man and stop the eternal growl about woman's extravagance. The average' man always ac ts as if his wif, spent all the money on herself. You would think, to hear him talk, that she ate all the food and monopolized till the light and licit of the house, and it would put a quietus on him if he was forced to read, item by item, of pecks of potatoes and pounds of coffee and sugar, and dozens of eggs, and beef steaks. and mutton chops, and tripe and mions, and see with Ills own • cis that it was for these neeessl ti, s for the family ami not on her I own adornment that his money was spent. While a husband has the right, however, to demand an accounting from his wife for the money’ she spends on the* household, it is an in vasion of her personal liberty, and an impertinent interference, for him to even ask to know what she did with her own allowance. That is hers to do with as she pleases, and he lacks something of being a gentleman if he presumes to keep any espionage over her in the mat ter. That most wives have no personal allowance, and never a penny that they may do with as they like, is only too true, and it does mote than any other one tiling to account for the restlessness and discontent among married women. To a grown up woman it is as much gall and • wormwood to be financially depend ent as it would be to a man, and it is the smouldering bitterness en gendered by this state of affairs that makes many a marriage a fail ure. Is Entitled to a Wage. The woman who gives her whole life to a man. who bears his chil dren. who makes him a home, who spends ounce of her strength and vitality in serving him and fur thering his interests, and who gives him a labor that he could not buy for money, feels that she is, at leasi. entitled to such wages as a cook or nurse maid might get, and to spend that much money without giving any more account of it to her husband than a cook or a nurse maid to whom he pays an equal amount would give him. But she rarely gets even that paltry sunt to do w ith as she pleases, and thig is what makes the financial situation so often acute between husband ami wife. The man who insists upon his wife keeping household accounts is right. She will be a better and a more careful manager for doing it, and it is but just that he should know how his partner is managing her side of the business. But the wife has a right to a private allow - ance of her own, to do with abso lutely as she likes, and it is her privilege to do with this as she sees tit. Her husband has no more right to demand an accounting of tills money than lie lias of any strange woman's income.' She has earned it over and over again, and it is hers. Thomas Tapper Writes on The Education of the Voter V. T. No. i6.-—The President Not an Individual ■ i With Arbitrary Power, But the Representa tive of the People by Whom He Is Paid. By THOMAS TAPPER. X T’OV have read the reports of Y the conventions. The proceedings consisted ; of prayers, excitement, hisses, yells ; and the buzz of the political ma- I chine. You might assume that a body of ! men, representative of all the pep ; pie, gathered together to nominate . a man capable of filling what is ; doubtless the greatest office on ; earth, would realize the responsi : bility that rests upon themselves. ; You might expect a certain feeling ; of awe and solemnity. You might ; expect that an act so fraught with : importance would be taken with the I guidance of prayer, but without the : disturbance of excitement, hisses i and cat-calls. You might. What is a president called upon to do? To begin with, he is the repre sentative of all the people—the head of the nation. I-resident’s Power > Comes From People. His power comes directly from i the people, and their welfare is as i sumed to be the prime object of his ’ consideration. Only a natural-born citizen may i aspire to this office. He must be i at least 35 years of age and 14 years > a resident of the United States. The president’s term of office is [ four years. He is eligible for re | election. So far as the constitu- I tion is concerned, a president may > be re-elected once, or twice, or I many times. Up to date, no man [ has ever filled the office for more , ! than two terms, and it seems quite unlikely that this precedent will be broken. The president is commander-in j chief of the army and navy of the ( United States and of the states' j militia when called into Federal i service. He is empowered to grant re prieves and pardons for offenses committed against the United States, but his power does not ex tend to cases of impeachment. With a two-thirds vote of the senate he may make treaties with foreign powers, thus extending his influence on behalf of the nation to the world at large. He appoints ambassadors to for eign nations. In fact, there come within his appointing power, with confirmation of the senate, about 8,000 offices. He may convene tlie houses of congress in extra sessions, and he may adjourn them to a elate not beyond the next regular session. From members of his cabinet he may require written opinions upon their departments. He receives am bassadors and foreign ministers. All bills passed by congress are brought before him for Ms signa ture or his veto. I ■- First Foundling Asylum By THE REV. THOMAS B. GREGORY 1' T was 173 years ago—July, 1739 that the big-hearted old sea captain. Thomas Coram, suc ceeded in getting through the pa pers for the incorporation of the "Foundling Hospital of London," the first home for friendless little children that was ever known among the English speaking people of the earth. From the beginning of human down to quite modern times the lot of the little child, especially if it happened to be a girl child with out legal parentage, was a most forlorn one. full of all that was cal culated to touch til" Heart and cad forth lite sorrow and pity of man i kind. But it seems that the compas sion was not forthcoming, and the little unfortunates, friendless and neglected, had to get along as best they could, save as they were now and then assisted by some private individual. For the idea of the sacredness of childhood —a thought that is so masterful in the present time—the people of antiquity had but a trif ling regard. Many of tile greatest thinkers of Greece and Rome, the foremost moulders of the public opinion and sentiment of tiieir day. had no ten derness iti their souls for child hood as such. Its innocence, its helplessness, made but a weak ap peal to their sympathy and love. The child that was b u-n into the THE home: paper These, the principal duties of president, are clearly set forth fn the constitution. The office makes of him a world figure. He takes his place beside kings and potentates of whatever name. He is not an individual with ar bitrary power. He is the represen tative of millions of individuals, with powers that are especially de signed and bestowed to secure for every one whom he represents the full blessings of citizenship. You have only to picture this man as a representative of one hundred millions of people doing business with congress, with the nine de partments of our national activity, through the members of his cabi net; meeting the representatives of every nation on earth,’commanding army and navy, allotting thousands of positions to office-holders, ap pointing proper representatives to foreign nations, and without speci fying further the activities of his office you can appreciate the pro priety of a convention opening with prayer. But it is doubtful if you can see the fitness of cat-calls, yells, hisses and the rumble of any kind of a roller, steam or otherwise. For all that is demanded of him, the president of the United States receives a salary and he gets a reputation. The salary is fixed at seventy-five thousand dollars per annum. The reputation is largely, though not wholly, of his own mak ing. Yet no position so open to pub lic scrutiny* can be so influenced by conditions that the man himself does not shine through. He may be assisted in his endeavors or he may bo thwarted, but his stand on ques tions, great or small, allows him to show the people, without doubt or uncertainty, what sort of stuff he is made of. Just What You Should Decide. When the parties have held their conventions, and the two or three or more nominees are submitted to the people, you decide, or you should decide, just this question: What man, among them, best measures up to the requirements? Then you elect that man, or you should elect him. In the course of time he appears once again in pub lic, on the 4th of March, when the chief justice of the United States administers the oath of office, which says: "I do solemnly swear that I will faithfully execute the office of president of the United States, and will, to the best of my ability, pre serve. protect and defend the con stitution of the United States.” The inauguration is a more sol emn occasion than the conventions. The seriousness of the business to be done stares the man In the face. And a new period of our history, four years later, stares you. as one of its citizens, in the face. world without a legal father and mother, or that was born below a certain mental and physical stand ard, or that chanced to be a girl, was in danger of being exposed— cast out into the fields to die of hunger or to be devoured by the wild beasts. The men who built the Parthenon and the Pantheon, who created' civ ilization and carried it to the utter most parts of the then known world, were at heart little better than barbarians, as is evidenced by their attitude of cold-blooded In difference to the appeals of help less childhood. When the Carpenter’s Son came the little ones began to look up. There was at last One to "bless" them, to take pity on their weak ness and to see in their purity, in nocence and helplessness the sacred obligation which was not to be ig nored. Hence, the beautiful words, "Suffer the little ones to come unto Me. and forbid them not." But the progress was slow, and It was not until the fifteenth century that the work of saving the little children from destruction was fair ly and systematically begun. In Italy. France. Belgium. Aus tria, the spirit of the new humanity began to show itself in the shape of the larger kindness to waifs, but it was not until Captain Coram founded his hospital for friendless children that they were taken in hand in away that was at once humane and scientific.