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EDITORIAL RAGE The Atlanta Georgian THE HOME PAPER
THE ATLANTA GEORGIAN
Published Every Afternoon Except Sunday
By THE GEORGIAN COMPANY
At 20 East Ala ha in a St.. Atlanta, Ga
Entered hr second-clamatter at poetofflre «t Atlanta, under act of March 8.18731
Subscription Price Delivered by carrier, 10 cents a By mall, $5 00 a year.
Payable in Advance*.
Recalling a Judge--AndWomen
Led the Crusade in This
First Example
Possibly the Law
Can Catch Up
CONCERNING A TRANSFER
Editor The Georgian:
As a reader of the Hearst pa
pers ever since the first publica
tion of The American in Chicago,
i take this means of bringing t*»
the notice of the people in this
city an injustice on the part of
the street tar companv to a gran
ger in this city.
I attended the has* ball game
Friday and after the game board
ed the first car 1 could «rowd
'onto to get to the Terminal Ho
tel. where I am stopping tin
paying my fare, 1 asked if the oar
would carry me to tin- Terminal
Station, and was told by the < in
ductor that it would not. but that
he would give me a transfer, and
that I should take any car marked
Terminal Station. 1 left this car
at the post office and walked over
to the corner of Broad and Ma
rietta Streets and took the first
car marked, as I was directed to
do by the conductor. The con
ductor «*n that tar refused to tak*
my transfer, and requested a cash
fare, which I }>aid. ns he said the
transfer I had was from a Ponce
DeLeon car and this car was the
same line, so he could not ac
cept min transfer He said 1 could
get off and use this transfer on a
Hunter car.
What 1 would like to know is
why 1 should have to wait for a
certain car going to the same des
tination (for me i ? There is no
reason whatever for tin* sireet
fa11w i' company not using a spe
cial transfer on a special car. as
the passenger accepts this trans-
f» r in good faith and has abso
lutely no way of knowing vsiieth-
cr it is good or not
STRANGER FROM GHh’AGtv
INFLUENCE OF HOME LIFE
Editor Tile Geoi gian
Her idly i read in The Georgian
an article by Mrs. Bohnefleld. po
lice matron in Atlanta, in which
site sa\s that home life is more
cause than anything else of girls'
ruin, in which I want to thank
liei for her good, plain words 1
agree with her in all she say*.
M\ pica is for mothers (and fa
thers! ui talk plainly to their
children. Do not let the children
be afraid to make a confident of
mot he or of father.
MRS. CARRIE \ BRANDON
Fort Jdeyers, Fla.
Gee! I Wonder Who Made Those? Elbert Hubbard
By HAL COFFMAN
Judge Weller, of San Francisco, has been recalled by a
vote of the good people of that progressive city, and conserva
tive citizens throughout the nation will be duly shocked at a
radical performance which these conservative citizens have be
lieved, or professed to believe, would shatter the foundations of
order and of established government.
In this dreaded Ban Francisco situation there is another
condition which should startle the reactionaries, and that is,
that the women led the crusade for the reoall of Judge Weller,
and cast a large part of the vote which recalled him.
But when conservative, or even reactionary, citizens are fa
miliar with the situation which resulted in the reoall of Judge
Weller they will be more disposed to realize that in this first in
stance at least of the recall of a judge their fearful forebodings
are not wholly justified.
San Francisco is no more free from vice than any other
city. There exist in that city, as elsewhere, evil men who prey
upon the weaknesses of young girls and lure them to their ruin
and to a life of shame.
As a rule such scoundrels, through the secrecy of their acts,
or through the ‘'pull’’ which they possess in certain corrupt
quarters, escape the punishment of their evil deeds. But one
such villain was caught and brought before the Grand Jury in
San Francisco and held to answer before Judge Weller.
The crime of this scoundrel—we refer to the indicted crim
inal—was of the vilest kind, and the criminality of his act could
not even find palliation in the consent of the girl he had de
stroyed.
Yet Judge Weller, through a sympathetic feeling, or through
the influence of that political “pull” of which we hear and see
so much, put this vile criminal under merely nominal bonds and
allowed him to jump the bail and leave the State.
Judge Weller 's action was typical of a condition which the
good people of San Francisco had determined to destroy, and in
order to begin the remedy forcefully and effectively they began
with a petition to recall this unworthy judge.
Let the reactionaries of the country, if they will, defend this
criminal and this judge who acted in collusion with him.
Let the reactionaries attack the principle of the recall and
the policy of woman's suffrage in this instance, if they can find
arguments with which to do so.
But The Georgian believes that the recall of judges has be
gun in a case which gives every evidence that the principle will
be carefully and intelligently applied, and only exerted when
its operation is obviously for the best interests of the commu
nity.
The Georgian also believes that the women have again dem
onstrated their intelligence and conscience and fine moral qual
ity as citizens and voters, and The Georgian hails this case of
Judge Weller as another and a convincing proof of the propriety
and practicability of the progressive principles which it has so
consistently advocated.
“It cannot be helped—it is
as it should be—that the law
is behind the times.”
Oliver Wendell Holmes, Jus
tice of the Supreme Court, says
the law must necessarily content itself with following a consid
erable distance in the wake of the world's prevailing thought—
because it can only embody “beliefs that have triumphed in the
battle of ideas ” and * 1 while there is doubt the time for law
has not come.”
This is the same as to say that judges must decide to day s
cases according to the ideas of yesterday, and must not apply ,
the ideas of to day until after they have ceased to be applicable.
If the law is to be thought of as a building, to which the
Legislature adds a new story to meet every new social situation,
and if the new story cannot be built until after the new situation
has been thoroughly mastered and understood by the mass of
the people, without any help from the courts—then this aston
ishing philosophy of Justice Holmes must be allowed to be cor
rect.
But if, on the contrary, the law is not at all to be thought of
as a dead structure of brick or steel—if it is rather to be thought
of as a living body, with red blood and brains and the breath of
generations of justice seeking men—if it has feet to stand on
and liands to lay hold of the right weapons in the vast arsenal
of principles and precedents—why, then, of course, the learned
Justice has made a grave mistake.
Labor and Deserved Leisure
By Ella Wheeler Wilcox
Copyright, 1913, by American-
Journal-Examiner.
B EFORE we ask for leisure let
us learn
The sacrednes* of time
the holy trust
Confided for a season to our care.
Labor and T/eisure make life
beautiful
When well divided, and labor
means
Deserved reward, and leisure
sweet repose.
Or happy explorations In the fair
Ascending paths of pleasure.
When we grow
In health. In wisdom and in hap
piness,
Through hours of freedom, then,
and then alone,
We prove our right to clamor for
more time;
But when the glnehop and the
gambling den.
The dive, the public dance hall
and the street
Send sodden creatures slowly
back to toll
After the ending of a holiday.
It makes a louder protest than
the voice
Of tyrant Greed against the
shortened hour
And lengthened wage of lahor.
Look to it
The leisure lifts you ere you ask
for more.
rTAHK above line® written by
I me have calUtd forth sev
eral criticisms and protests,
soun kindly meant, some meant
unkindly, from working people
and their defenders.
All these protests have been
made from a mistaken point of
\ iev\ No one living believes more
fully in (he shortening of hours of
labor than the writer of the lines
quoted.
I work frequently fifteen hours
a day. Hut 1 work for myself,
and be* a use I like my work 1
have no employer, and that makes
an entirely different thing of la
bor.
Eight Hours Sufficient.
Eight hours a day are quite
enough for continuous work of
any kind Most employers, heads
of business houses and capital-#
i*t.«. who have the money-making
fever, work more than that. Bu;
they also work fur themselves.
No one can find fault or discharge
them or dock their wage if they
happen to be late or take a holi
day.
To be compelled to go to work
at a certain hour and to remain
until the prescribed time, as has
already been stated, is quite an
other story.
I hope to live to see the time
ELLA WHEELER WILCOX.
when by inventions and by new
conditions the whole drudgery of
the world’s work will be done on
five hours’ time and the human
race allowed the remainder to
grow, mentally and spiritually.
As 1 came of a long-lived race
on two sides, 1 may realize my
dream, but the world will realize
it some time, surely.
When 1 think <»f the cotton
mills, with their deafening roar
and fiying dust, where I have seen
women working ten and twelve
hours a day and begging positions
fur their children (and opposing
any movement to prevent the em
ployment of children as I person
ally knew them to bel; when 1
think of the feather factories and
sweatshops and the thousand** of
other manufactories where no
light of day ever penetrates and
men. women and children are
sacrificing eyesight and health
on the altar «»f greed, i long to
open all the doors and send the
toilers forth fo green fields and
the woods fur half of every work
ing day; and I know the world
would be better off and the prog
ress of every race accelerated
were it made possible for every
toiler in the land to enjoy three
hours of rest every day In the
open air.
It Is because I want the toilers
themselves to help make the
world realize their need that the
quoted lines were written.
The Employer’s Objection.
The employer’s objection to the
shorter hour of labor is under
stood as the voice of Greed.
But when the ginshop and the
gambling den.
The dive, the public dance hall
and the street
Send sodden creatures back to
toil
After the ending of a holiday
It makes a louder protest than
the voice
Of tyrant Greed • • •
I have seen a woman weep and
have heard her regret the an
nouncement of an unexpected
holiday for her husband. He was
a workingman, a laborer.
She knew the holiday meant the
wasting of his wages and the
greater injury to his health than
two days’ work.
The Film Makers
BY MILES OVERHOLT
T HE train rushed swiftly onward over mountains wild and steep.
Past cataracts and waterfalls and canyons wide and deep;
And then there came an awful crash—a bridge had tumbled in -
And the shouting of a pilgrim could be heard above the din.
The pilgrim stood upon the brink and turned a crank machine,
Nor ran to help the injured—he must regulate his screen;
For the guy was taking pictures of the wreck, which you must know-
He was the traveling agent for a moving picture show.
In far Arabia's sandy clime a caravan was stopped.
A w'htapered word passed dow n the line and then the camels dropped
The men lay dtfwn in awful fright behind the living fort.
The while’the sandstorm frolicked like a giant bent on sport.
Ami while the travelers groveled there, prepared to meet their doom.
A Johnnie with a carnet a stood ih* amid the gloom
An. turned the crank industriousi> to catch the sandy blow—
He was the traveling agent for a moving picture show.
From | ole to pole from clime to clime, in hilly or in warm,
In Afrit a s wilds, in city streets, in sunshin or in storm.
1’p in the air. beneath the sea. on mountain or in vale,
Alone on foot, on -pecia train, on md ur Indian trail.
Where’er there's life or death or woe. or maybe some of each,
Relieve us. St •' e. the pidum aMbu m always within reach.
H‘ > iher* in forty '-**»*.; way*, n.. matter where you go —
1 > ui • | -n ii ml rash to see the world—take In a picture show .
Declares
Charity Breeds Beggars
Any Man Who Has a Job Has a
Chance, He Says, and the World
Needs Capable People as Never
Before. It Is Able and Willing to
Pay Them for It if They Can Ren
der a Service.
By ELBERT HUBBARD
Copyright. 1918, International News Service.
ft meant the ginshop and the
gambling den.
When an employer sees and
knows of many similar results
from holidays he is strengthened
in his arguments against the
shortened hours of labor. He does
not stop to think of the thousands
of women and the hundreds of
sober and moral men all about
him who need the added leisure to
make home life worth the name.
He does not consider the pit
iable cases of poor fathers who
love their children, yet w r ho nev
er see them save when they are
asleep.
Argument in Favor.
Nor the numbers of wives and
mothers rising at the dawn to
prepare a breakfast for husbands
and sons who return at nightfall
unable to do more than to fall
into exhausted sleep.
For every argument against the
movement of shortened hours of
labor there are a dozen good ones
in its favor, but it Is a misfor
tune when the laboring man him
self, by his bad habits during
hours of leisure, makes a louder
protest than the enemies of the
movement are making.
LOOK TO IT THAT LEISURE
LIFTS YOU ERE YOU ASK
FOR MORE
S AILORS just ashore, with gay
painted galleys in tow, and
with three months’ pay, are
the most charitable men on earth.
The beggars wax glad when
Jack lumbers their way; but,
alas, - tomorrow Jack belongs to
the poor.
Charity in the past has been
prompted by weakness and whim
—the penance of rogues—and
often we give to get rid of the
troublesome applicant.
Beggary and virtue were im
agined to have something akin.
Rags and honesty were sort of
synonymous, and we spoke of
honest hearts that beat ’neatli
ragged jackets. That was poetry,
but was it art? Or was it just a
little harmless exercise of the
lachrymose glands?
Cringed and Crawled.
Riches and roguery were spoken
of in one breath, unless the gen
tlemen were present, and then
we curtsied, cringed and crawled.
These things doubtless dated
back to a time when the only
mode of accumulating wealth was
through oppression. Pirates were
rich—honest men were poor. To
be poor proved that you were not
a robber. The heroes in war took
cities and all they could carry
away was theirs.
The monasteries were passing
rich in the Middle Agefc, because
their valves opened only one way
—they received much and paid
out nothing. To save the souls of
men was a just equivalent for ac
cepting their services for the lit
tle time they were on earth.
The monasteries owned the
land, and the rentals paid by the
fiefs and villeins went into the
Church's treasuries. Sir Walter
Scott had an abbot say this: “I
took the vow* of poverty, and find
myself with an income of twenty
thousand pounds a year.”
But wealth did not burden the
monks forever. Wealth changes
hands—that is one of its peculi
arities.
Came wild war. red of tooth
and claw. And the soldiery, who
heretofore had been used only to
protect the religious orders, now,
flushed with victory, turned
against them.
Easy to Listen Then.
Charges were trumped up
against churchmen high in au
thority. The monasteries were
looked upon as contraband of war.
"To the victors belong the spoils"
was the motto of a certain man
who was President of the United
States,' so persistent was the war
idea of acquiring wealth.
The property of the religious
orders was confiscated, and as a
G IRIBALDI’S famous visit to
England began April 1,
1863—and for the fol
lowing twenty-four days the
red-«hlrted old hero was giv
en the time of his life. Never
•any foreigner, hardly any native
hero, had ever been tendered such
a magnificent reception.
The Duke of Sutherland’s four-
horse carriage. containing the
Son of the Skipper of Nice, strug
gled for six long hours through
five miles of London streets, be
tween the starting point at the
vessel on which Garibaldi arrived
and Stafford House Square, near
St. James Palace. A half million
people had turned out to meet
the man in the red shirt and gray
blanket, and when the square was
reached it seemed that all London
was there to meet the liberator.
Amid a "noise of shouting like
the noise of the sea in storm."
says an eyewitness, "Garibaldi
stepped out of the carriage, as
calm as in the day of battle, into
a circle of fair ladies and great
statesmen on the steps of Staf
ford House, while the Duke's car
riage. in which he had come, lit
erally fell to pieces in llie stable,
strained to breaking-point by the
weight of the thousands of strong
arms that had pulled at it and
clung to it as it passed through
a city gone mad with joy.”
And it is well to remember, in
spite of what lias been said about
the Duke of Sutherland and his
carriage, the fair ladies and great
statesmen, that the wonderful re
ception that Garibaldi met with
was given to him by the plain
peoole of England.
•’he working men «*f England
were, in the midst of the battle
qaJjyppqb-sement. They were
of
reward for heroic services sol
diers were given big tracts of
land.
The great estates in Europe all
have their origin in this well-
established custom of dividing
the spoils. The plan of taking the
property of each or all who were
guilty of sedition, contumacy and
contravention was well estab
lished by precedents that traced
back to Cain.
When George Washington ap
propriated the estate of Roger
Morris, forty centuries of prece
dent looked down upon him.
Also it might be added that if
a man owned a particularly valu
able estate, it was easy for a sol
dier to listen to and believe the
report that the owner had spoken
ill of the king, and given succor
to the enemy.
Then the soldier felt it his
"duty” to punish the recreant one
by taking his property. That
gave us The Age of the Barons.
The Reign of the Barons was
merely a transfer of power with
no revision of ideals. The choice
between a miter and a helmet is
nil and when the owner con
verses through his headgear, his
logic is alike vulnerable and val
ueless.
The Past Is Dead.
Then The Age of the Barons
has given away to The Age of the
Merchants. The Merchants, whose
business it is to carry things
from where they are plentiful to
where they are needed. But they
did business by finesse and clev
erness flavored with deception.
But the times have changed.
Truth is now an asset, and a lie
is a liability. Merchants to-day
deal with their friends. Money is
incidental to service.
Comes co-operation so quietly,
and with so little ostentation that
men do not realize the change.
"Lay hold on eternal life,” .said
St. Paul, writing to Timothy. The
proper translation we now know-
should have been, "Lay hold on
the age to come.”
All life is a preparation, just as
all life is a sequence—a result.
The past is dead, the present is
dying, and only that w’hich is to
come i3 alive.
Philanthropy once was pallia
tion, just as the entire practice of
medicine was palliation until day
before yesterday.
Now we believe in equality of
opportunity. We give men a
chance—or we certainly should.
And any man w ho has a job has
a chance. The world needs capa
ble people as never before. Also
it is able and willing to pay them
for it if they can render a serv
ice.
Garibaldi in London
By REV. THOMAS B. GREGORY.
fighting King Privilege as hard as
Garibaldi had been fighting the
Bourbons, and now that the hero
of Italy, the plain man of the
people who had emancipated his
country from the tyranny of the
Bourbon rule, was actually In
their midst they were delirious
with joy.
It was an unexpected privilege
to carry one of themselves in tri
umph through London streets, as
if he had been a Caesar or a Wel
lington. It was the tribute of the
democracy of England to the man
who. with his good sword, had
done so much for the democracy
of Italy. It was humanity an
swering humanity, justice clasp
ing hands with justice, the spirit
of liberty In the British Isles
shouting its mighty welcome to
the lovers of liberty in the his
toric peninsula in the great Blue
Sea.
Garibaldi gave England as
much as he received from her.
He won all hearts, those of the
nobility, as well as those of the
yeomanry. Tennyson, with whom
he visited, and .smoked, and re
cited Italian poetry, says of him:
"What a noble human being! His
manners have a certain divine
simplicity in them, such as I have
never witnessed in a Ektl*e
these islands, among m
and they are gentler
of most young maidens whom I
know."
While on the Isle of Wight,
Garibaldi planted a tree In Ten
nyson's garden, of which later on,
the poet wrote as—
—"the waving pine which here
The warrior of Caprera set,
The name that earth will nog
forget
Till earth has roiled her ssiest
year,”
J at least,
nan those