Atlanta Georgian. (Atlanta, Ga.) 1912-1939, September 05, 1912, HOME, Image 16
EDITORIAL PAGE THE ATLANTA GEORGIAN. Published Every Afternoon Except Sunday Ry THE GEORGIAN COMPANY At 20 East Alabama St., Atlanta. Ga. Entered as second-class matter at posti fflce at Atlanta, under act of March 3. 1879. Subscription Price—Delivered by carrier. 10 cents a week. By mail. 35 00 a year. Payable In advance. Too Much Protesting Will Surely Lead to a New Canal Treaty Tn the chons of protest that has arisen from British news papers and their Tory echoes on this side of the water since the passage of the Panama canal bill, there is far more fury than reason. The Georgian does not believe that anything in the Hay- Pauncefote treaty binds the United States- to forbid American ships free passage through the canal. Senator Lodge, a member of the senate committee on foreign relations, admits that such an idea never entered his bend when the treaty was reported. The Georgian does not believe that the term, “all na tions.'’ used by the treaty in speaking of equal treatment for vessels passing through lhe canal, meant American ships, any more than the term, “all nations, - ’ applies to American war ships in the rule which forbids vessels of war of a belligerent from revictualing or taking any stores in the canal. Such an interpretation of the term would render the canal utterly value less to us in time of war. ' But it seems to be necessary to remind British newspapers, AND NEWSPAPERS SERVING THE INTERESTS OF THE AMERICAN RAILROADS DENIED A MONOPOLY OF THE CANAL BY THE PASSAGE OF THE BILL, that since the signing of the Hay-Pauncefote treaty groat things have hap pened. Great Britain, the power with which the treaty was nego tiated. is no longer, as it then was, the possessor of Hie majority of territory nearest the canal. The I nited States is no longer, as it then was. a power seeking a waterway through alien ter ritory, and requiring the consent and co-operation of another great nation to do so. SINCE THE SIGNING OF THE HAY-PAUNCEFOTE TREATY THE UNITED STATES HAS BOUGHT A STRIP OF LAND ON THE ISTHMUS OF PANAMA. THIS STRIP IT OWNS OUTRIGHT. IT NEEDS NO ALLY IN CANAL BUILD ING OR (’ANAL OPERATING. IT NEED MAKE No CON CESSIONS TO A POWER WHICH CONTRIBUTED NOT ONE PENNY TO THE BUILDING OF THE CANAL. AND CAN BE OF NO AID TO THE UNITED STATES IN ITS CON DUCT OR IN ITS DEFENSE. .The British press and its Tory allies in the United States may ven- easily protest too much for their own good in this matter. Assuming that, in answer to the outcries against the provisions of the hill, the case is taken to The Hague tribunal, the extreme penalty, in the event of a decision adverse to the United States, would he the return of the money collected from vessels of foreign nations which had passed through the canal be tween the date of its opening and the time the decision was rendered. And that would defeat the very object for which the British newspapers and the American railroad organs are striving, FOR IT WOULD INEVITABLY LEAD TO THE DENUNCIATION AND TERMINATION OF THE TREATY. The treaty terminated, an end would be made of the conten tion that we can not conduct our own canal for the benefit of crur own citizens, Great Britain’s enthusiasm as an ally of the American railroads in fighting the canal bill would cease, and the enemies of the anti-monopoly provisions of the bill would have to come out and fight in the open—solely as the advocates of greed. George W. Perkins Will Write For The Atlanta Georgian in Favor of Roosevelt At the beginning of the campaign this newspaper an nrrtmeed that it would print the news of all the parties, that the Hearst newspapers would support Wilson and that represen tatives of Mr. Taft and Mr. Roosevelt would be invited to con tribute to the paper as often as they choose and discuss their side of the campaign. It will interest, our readers to know that George W. Per kins, a man very successful in large affairs, now ven prominent in the Roosevelt campaign, will discuss “the Bull Moose move ment” with our readers and try to persuade them that they shrmld vote for Roosevelt and the Bull Moose or Progressive party. » Mr. Perkins has built up big industries and a big individual fortune. He is interested now in building up a new party, and our readers will be interested in his point of view and in his ar guments. The contention of Mr. Perkins and the others interested in the Roosevelt-Progressive movement is Hint the people do not govern themselves, but accept government from above. Roosevelt may win and he may lose; there is no doubt that he is doing his share toward ripping up and tearing out old. fossilized ideas of government by party. There is no doubt that he and those associated with him are appealing directly to the people AX'D RELYING OX THE PEOPLE FOR SUCCESS. In the old days a man like Perkins, with a very large for tune and wide business connections, would have used his monev to buy or hire politicians, office holders and the lower class o f newspaper editors. Now. instead of working behind closed doors in secret, through the power of money. Mr. Perkins appeals directly to the people, says what he thinks and signs his name to hi- opinions —and. by the way. is able to get them printed in the Hearst newspapers, circulating more than two millions of copies each day and read by at least six or eight million- of American-. The new method of publicity, of direct appeal to the people, is certainly an improveni, yt on old style politics. And Mr. Perkins and tin* cause that be represents will at least get a respectful hearing from our’great arniv of reader-. W’e shall publish the important -axing- of Hie various can didateg And we shall give space to those that arc authorized to speak on their behalf and our reader,- will make up their minds and vote accordingly which - iln right and the unit wax to run a republic “Give light aud lilt people will liud the road.'’ . - , ■ » The Atlanta Georgian THURSDAY, SEPTEMBER 5, 1912. /"Mg, ARchßolD I'M SENAToFV? —- ARCHBoupA . /A oevicts « /w'IG&LESWORTH. 'THIHK < STAMDARDi' HT <3 MY J>UT Y I Z <7/1 ££ oF GREAT USE To THE AHBOHESTHAMk ///.. O ,k5T \TO TELL You TUAiA WWT \CAN YoUSLIP / ,GWDTo> VW \ or(E Os / (MEET Yo\j, v£ yjk | 15TkYt<-K>To Tl Those ( \ Put sometmimg / ~ p’ZSooo / 7 \ over ord <— IM'iSt 'HI life \ ®L LN; LIBI W M r < Almost gets big piece of coin! Arrival of Honest Man ruins delicate negotiations! Causes violent exit of aged philosopher! Department of Water Supply now repairing hydrant! AMAN asks these questions: "Is it not Itluff when an old maid says that she has never envied a married woman, and wouldn’t trade places with one, and that she is happief single than she would be if she was mar ried?" Probably every man in the world would answer these questions in the affirmative and say yes; that every old maid who pretended that she was a spinster from choice was putting up a bluff that any man would call, but a woman would reply to the question by saying both yes and no. Undoubtedly the old maid who scoffs at marriage and boasts of her single blessedness is fibbing, and putting a gay face on a sad matter. Every human being knows, every instinct teaches us, that men and women are each in complete without the other, and that it takes both to round out the full and perfect life. What It Should Be. Husband and wife, children and home, are the materiaj out of which real, lasting, soul satisfying happiness is made, and no matter w’hat else one ha.«. if one lacks them, one has missed the best that the gods have to bestow. There is no other joy on earth so exquisite as the companionship of the man and woman who are mated as well as married, w ho have every thought in common, and who find in each other an exhaustless well of sympathy from which they may draw at will. There is no other in terest in life so intense and undy ing as that which people have in their children; there can be no happiness so sweet "and serene as that which comes from the feel of little children’s arms about one's neck, and the touch of baby's hands w ithin one’s own. There can be no occupation so absorbing ami so worth while as the making of a beautiful home to be a -hrine for this lovely family Tic- is what marriage should he. It is the ideal that we all see in out dreams. ft is the will-o'-the wisp that beckon- millions • into notrntonj . and it i foolish for tn.x in.m <>r woman to .-ax that iic or she has not dreamed tin dream, DIOGENES HAS BRIGHT IDEA! Copyright, 1912, by International News Service. € ti Putting Up a Bluff By DOROTHY DIN. and longed to be one of the blessed who dwell within some domestic Eden. We all know that a happy mar riage is the happiest estate in the world, but we also know that an unhappy marriage is an earthly purgatory. In matrimony there 1s something that brings out the best or the worst of peofile, and as there is no other blessing equal to a good husband or wife, so there is no other curse that compares with a bad one. If all marriages were happy, and if the dove of peace roosted on every roof tree. then, indeed, old bachelors and old maids would ex pire of envy, and tlx ir boasts of contentment with their hollow lots would be hollow mockery. Unfortunately, however, there is nothing in the average marriage that does anything but hold it up as an awful warning to the unmar ried. and it is only the triumph of hope over other people’s experi ences that leads any young couple to dare attempt the holy estate. The old bachelor, returning from an evening spent in the bosom of the family of his friend Benedict, reflects that poor old Benedict gets a mighty poor run for his money, and that a fretful and nagging wife. and t spats and jars, and the loss of line’s personal liberty, is hardly an adequate return for a man having to work like a dray horse to support a family. There fore. the old bachelor sighs a sigh of contentment, and says, "Not for muh," as he turns the key in his ' comfortable apartment. Nor does th?* old maid, w hen she visits around among her married and friend-, find anything to shake her belief in the fact that she ehose the better part when she decided to stay single. She ob serves that her sister has to work ten times as hard as she does, even if she is a working woman and sister is one of the lucky ones married to a man who "supports her" And she takes note that while she gets a pay envelope for her work, and lias money that no body presumes to dictate what she shall do with, sister has never a penny of her own, and ha.« to go like a beggar to her husband for evetw cent. Also she has to give .in account of what she did with lhe iiuartei Io- g.ili he: week be fore last. And likewise liusbanu < groans over how much It costs to support a w ife. The spinster sees that she is bet ter dressed than sister unless sister happened to marry rich, and that she looks about five years younger. Moreover, the spinster observes that in addition to everything else that sister does, she has to spend her time and energy in placating husband, or else in quarreling with him, and that, although it is polite and complimentary to believe that husband still loves sister, there’s no evidence upon which to base this conclusion. Apparently it does not take more than three months to rub the gilt off the ginger bread matrimony, and after that if a man feels any admiration, or tenderness, for his wife he doesn’t take the pains to show it. Thinks She's Better Off. So the spinster takes a good, firm grip on her latchkey and her pocketbook, and says that she’s better off. than sister, and that she doesn't envy any married woman. And there’s no bluff in that. She is simply telling the truth, nine times out of ten. when she makes that assertion, for it is only too sadly true that ideal marriages are as scarce as hen's teeth, and that in the whole range of our ac quaintances we scarcely know one couple who have made a succesfo instead of a failure of matrimony. In the past the old maid's boast that she didn't marry because she didn't want to may have been a bluff and not sincere, because in former days every woman had to marry in order to get a home of her own. That is not the case now. Any woman can support herself as well as a husband is likely to do it, and so matrimony has be come a choice instead of a neces sity. and it is because women see so few good husbands that they are getting more and more afraid of marriage, and to believe that it is better to stick to the peace and contentment they have than to risk the danger of a heart-breaking disappointment in matrimony. But the single woman knows that while she may have missed misery, she has also missed the highest happiness. She has but the half loaf, and site goes to her grate hungering for the love, and th* man. and the child, and the home th.ii should be evert wom an's portion. THE HOME PAPER Elbert Hubbard Writes on College Degrees “The Best Way to Prepare for Life Is to Begin to Live. A School Should Not Be a Preparation: a School Should Be Life.’’ By ELBERT HUBBARD Copyright, 1912, by International News Service SO long as some men who are not college bred take first place on the roster of fame, and other men who are college bred, working alongside of them, sink out of sight, most thinking men are quite willing to admit the so-called high i education is not a necessity. Os the college men who suc ceed. who shall -ay they succeeded by and through the aid the college gave, or in spite of it? Yet many n> n who win will wail, "If I only had the advantage of college training!" If so, it might have ironed all the individuality out of them. Let All Go To School. However, I would have every man have a college education in order that ho might see bow lit tle the thing is realty worth. I would have every man rich that he might know the worthlessness of riches. To take a young ntan away from work, say .at cigiiteen years of age, and keep him from'useful labor, in the name of education, for four years, will some day be regarded as a most absurd proposition. It is the most gigantic.illusion of the age. Set in motion by theologians, the idea was that Ute young per son should b,c drilled and versed in "sacred” themes. Hence, the dead languages and the fixed thought that education should be esoteric. This separation from the prac tical world for a number of years, wtierc no useful work was done, and the whole attention fixed on abstract themes and theories, often tended to cripple the man so that lie could never go back to the world of work and usefulness. He was no longer a producer, and had to be supported by tithes and taxes. And, of course, as he did not in tend to go back to the world of work and usefulness, it really didn't make any ditTerence'if he did sink End of the Revolution By REV. THOMAS B. GREGORY. THE last battle of the Revolu tionary war was fought at Blue Lick, Kentucky, Au gust 20. 1782. England died hard, and in ways that were far from being in strict keeping with international law tried to postpone the final surren der as long as she could. It was in consequence of such tactics that the battle of Blue Lick was fought. On the 16th of August. 1782. a force of several hundred Canadians and Wyandotte Indians laid siege to Bryan's Station, some fifl? miles from the present city of Lexington, the capital of the .famous Blue Grass region. The next day. a party of ISO frontiersmen, commanded by Dan iel Boone. John Todd and Stephen Trigg, hastened to the rescue, not withstanding- the fact that they were greatly outnumbered by the enemy. Upon reaching the near neigh borhood of the station a council of war was held to determine upon the line of attack. Boones advice was to march silently up the river and fall upon the rear of the enemy, while, at the same time, the main attack should be delivered in front. Unfortunately, this sensible ad vice was spoiled by the rash action of a major named McGary, who dashed his horse into the riwur, shouting: "Let all who are not cowards follow me." •if eoursi, M< Gary'.-, action was madness, but H wa. a inadlic .- that became in- I staittlj contagious, and soon most SifgJ MB into a pupa-like condition of o : . lity. In the smaller college- mam ... stances are found of student* working their way through My experience leads me to beir that such students stand a v ry much better chance in the w. r, race than those who are made x empt from practical affairs b\ , - ing everything provided. Thi ;n. sponsibility of earing for him.-r f "a a necessary factor in man's... , lution. And the point of this pre;- fo ment lies right here that to make a young man exempt fiom me practical w orld, from < ighteen i > twenty-two, is to run the risl ruining him for life. Possible yo U have taken opportunity from him and turned him into a memory imi. chine. There are persons who air il- Xvays talking about preparing tor life. The best way to prepare f.y life is to begin to live. A school should jiot be a prr .’.i s tion; a school should be lit'.-. Isolation from the world in order to prepate for the world’s work - folly. You might as well tak ,t boy out of the blacksmith shop m order to teach him blacksiniiliin" Is the Useful Man. •Any college that does not teach its pupils to work at praetic.T, useful tasks, Is a make-believe. . tel every college student know- it V’rom the age of six or seven ..r --upward the pupil should fee) tl. he is doing something useful, lot merely killing time; and so ii> work and his instruction shou'.l go right along hand in hand The educated man is the usefi! man. And no matter how many coil.'"., degrees a man has. if he can not something that the world wai. done, he is an educated ignorani.; ami is one with the yesterda.' . doing pedagogic goose-step adow n the days to dusty death. of the men were fording the .-tn htird after the rash major. Crossing without molcsta r they reached the top of the rid? w hen their troubles began in dc.oi earnest. from front and Ilan they reefive'd a deadly lire fioui the Indians and their Canadian al lies. They had been ambushed, ai ■' the invisible foe shot ihem down like dogs. Outnumbered three to one. and presently quite surrounded, th' • fought like the brave men th were until they realized that to re main longer was to be aimihila 1 whereupon they broke through fiery cm don and escaped as I they could. Sixty-seven Kentuckians w killed outright and many of wounded were afterward ma <• cred. The loss of the Canadi-n | and Wyandottes was never knovn as they carried away their k. ■'■ and wounded But the .redmen made no in r« trouble for Kentucky The tr of peace deprived them of th’ r British backing, and the Unit- States was left to deal with th’ 11 after its ow n w ay. The mem. : v of the brave fight that was put bj th'- handful of frontiersmen gered with them. and. with no I; of help from England, they r the Kentuckians a grand I'' l alone. Such, iij brief is the store ■■ last battle of the war of th'’ I*' elution Beginning away u| Ma -i'hu"'tt , tli- great sl' ,: -- < mlcd at Blm- Li'-K.-K'ntui 6 - 1 r-g miii Iha I w a a n unknown dcmcss when the struggle