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IIEARST’S SUNDAY AMKKIL'AN, ATLiAiVlA, UA, SN» NIIAl, SWrrwaiBBK 14, I *113.
READY FOR SELF-RULE;
Bishop Fallows Declares That Dean
Worcester, Student of Islands, Re
turning From Archipelago, Will
Showh allacy of NativeGovernment.
In view of the departure of Bur
ton Harrison, the new Wilson Gov
ernor General of the Philippines, who
sailed Wednesday from San Fran
cisco for Manila, and the declared
intention of the Democratic Congress
to give to the Filipinos absolute in
dependence eight years hence, the
following article, by Bishop Fallows,
is illuminating.
Bishop Fallows traveled 10,000
miles among the islands to satisfy
himself of conditions there and he
concludes that independence for the
Filipinos now or within a few years
would be a calamity. His article fol
lows:
By SAMUEL FALLOWS.
(Bishop of Chicago and Noted Edu
cational Authority.)
There shortly comes from the Phil
ippines a man who has a valuable
and timely message for the American
people- He Is Dean C. Worcester,
recently Secretary of the Interior,
the American who has had the long-
' est and most intimate contact with
Philippine affairs.
Many years before our war with
Spain, when to the popular American
mind Manila and the Philippines
were indefinite and hazy points bn
the map, Mr, Worcester made two
extended tours of the archipelago.
As a member of scientific expedi
tions, gathering data and specimens,
he twice traveled the length of the
group given into our keeping, and
when President McKinley needed the
counsel and assistance of men of
knowledge, Dean Worcester was one
of the first to whom he turned.
President McKinley appointed him
a member of the Schurmann Com
mission, and when William Howard
Taft was chosen to found civil gov
ernment in the Philippines he con
tinued him as member of the com
mission, which remains to this day
as the senior governing body in the
islands.
Mr. Worcester was made Secretary
of the Interior in the Government in
stituted by McKinley and approved
by Congress, and continuously re
tained the post until a week ago
Monday, when he resigned to make
way for a man chosen by the Wil
son Administration.
In this capacity he organized and
directed the Bureaus of Health,
Land, Forestry and Science, besides
becoming the guardian of the million
non-Christian tribesmen numbered
among our wards in the Orient. Taft,
Wright, Ide, Smith, Moses and other
veteran administrators of the Phil
ippine Government finished their la
bors and passed to other fields, but
Worcester remained fourteen years.
Notable Service to Nation.
Dean Worcester's service to the
nation has been a notable one In
many respects, but his guardianship
of the wild men, an extraordinary talp
of service and adventure, must make
the largest appeal to us at home. The
Spanish Government and the Chris
tian peoples of the Philippines appear
to have given themselves little con
cern as to their wild neighbors. A
few hardy and devoted missionaries
ventured among them, but contact
seems to have been largely accidental
and occasional.
The largest groups of non-clvllized
“OW!” Corns?
Use “GETS-IT"
“QETS-IT,” the New-Plan Corn Cure,
Makes Any Corn Shrivel, Vanish.
Tou’il say, "It does beat all how
quick 'GETS-IT' got rid of that corn.
It’s almost magic!” “GETS-IT" gets
even' corn, every time, as sure as the
sun rises. It takes about two seconds
“Madam, If You’d Use ‘GETS-IT’ for
Corns, You Could Wear Any Tight
Shoe Eaally!"
to apply it Corn pains stop, you for
get the corn, the com shrivels up. and
It’s gone! Ever try anything like
that? You never did. There’s no
more fussing with plasters that press
on the corn, no more salves that take
oft the surrounding flesh, no more
bandages. No more knives, files or
razors that make corns grow, anti
cause danger of blood poison. “GETS-
IT'’ is equally harmless in healthy or
irritated flesh. It "gets” eevry corn,
wart, callous and bunion you've got.
“GETS-IT” is sold at all druggists
at 25 cents a bottle, or sent on receipt
of price by E. Lawrence Company,
Chicago. ...
peoples inhabit the province of North
Luzon, living in wildly picturesque
and formerly inaccessible mountains.
These superb but primitive peoples
have engaged in inter-tribal warfare
throughout their history and this ter
rible condition was accentuated by tin
repulsive practice of taking and pre
serving as house ornaments the heads
of their enemies. From this custom
derived the name of headhunters.
Their feuds were both tribal and per
sonal. and all the people were touched
by the malign hand of vengeance and
fear.
Rapacity had marked the attitude
of the Christian Filipino in his deal
ings with these unhappy children of
the mountains, and when Worcester
and his men went among them thev,
too, were received as enemies. Their
first greetings were challenges to bat
tles, and It was only through superb
courage that they won a hearing in
the first place, while endless patience
and Infinite tact were necessary to
the establishment of the confidence
and friendship which has resulted in
the acceptance by the wild people of
civilized law.
Worcester not only won and re
tained the friendship of the wild peo
ple, but brought peace to them and
turned their thoughts and hands to
the more useful things of life. War
ring tribes were brought together in
friendly relationship and the rivalry
of athletics took the place of forays.
Schools were started, industry and
husbandry encouraged and the once
inaccessible mountains were bisected
and crosscut with roads and trails,
largely constructed by the wild men
themselves. Occasionally a head is
taken, but the custom may be said to
have almost disappeared.
Under the old order the men were
so busy fighting- that farming -was
neglected and frequently large num
bers of people were in want. The
termination of warfare, individual and
collective, has sent thousands of men
back to the fields and the food supply
is now always ample to meet all the
needs of the people and leave a con
siderable annual surplus.
Gained Their Friendship.
The wild tribe relationship in the
Philippines offered at the beginning a
veritable hornets' nest of trouble for
the United States Government, the
possibilities of which are strikingly
illustrated by the experience of the
Japanese in Formosa and the Dutch
in Java, where costly and endless war
has been waged against the hillmen.
Had the die been cast for war rather
than peace with the hillmen of the
Philippines, it would have been a
formidable and endless task to con
quer and control them. The tribesare
numerous and their men are big. up
standing fellows, bom of forebears
who never knew peace. Fear is not a
quality of their warriors, and they
would have been a- troublesome en
emy.
In gaining their friendship Worces
ter and his men rendered largo serv
ice to their country and the cause of
civilization and set in motion a work
that is unique in the whole relation
ship between civilization and sav
agery-. These peoples have great pos
sibilities of development and there
fails to the successors of Dean
Worcester in the Philippines an im
portant duty to carry forward the
task upon which he made such a
splendid beginning.
The most important relationship
that Dean Worcester has had toward
the rest of the Filipino people has
been on the side of sanitation and
science.
It was necessary to wage the bat
tle from many sides. The first requi
site was an up-to-date scientific in
stitution that would furnish the best
fighting material, and there was cre
ated, under Worcester’s direction, a
great laboratory that has won more
acclaim In Europe than it has in the
United States.
Another necessity was a modem
school of medicine and surgery that
would train Filipinos to minister to
the needs of their own people, and
such an institution was founded. Hos
pitals were another dire necessity,
and these were created. Clinics were
another need, and these were pro
vided. Nurses were needed every
where, and training schools for
young Filipino women were started.
Thousands of lepers were scattered
throughout the archipelago, and these
were slowly gathered in a great col
ony founded at Cullon Island. Slowly
through the years there was a steady
gain against disease and the opposi
tion of ttie people; only a decade was
necessary finally to turn the tide.
Hospitals and clinks which once
aroused the fear of the people and
were deserted are now unable to
meet their daily demands. Manila
General Hospital Is tiow the largest
and busiest Institution in the capital
and the Manila Free Clinic has grown
to be the third largest in the world.
Dean Will Tell of Filipinos,
Freed from long official service and
the restraints which it consciously
and unconsciously imposes, Dean
Worcester Is coming home to talk to
the country about the Philippines. He
says that he intends to travel from
coast to coast telling what he knows
about the islands and their peoples,
and his message is going to be worth
hearing. He knows more about his
subject than any other living mart.
Mr. Worcester has prepared a se
ries of nine addresses, and their sub
jects are as follows: ’Among the
Wild Trjbes of the Philippines,” “The
Headhunters of Northern Luzon,"
“What the United Ktates Has Done
for the Wild Tribes of the Philip
pine Islands,” "Forest Resources of
the Philippine Islands,” “Commercial
Possibilities of the Philippine Is
lands," "Health Work In the Philip
pine Islands.” “Educating the Fili
pinos," “Modem Manila," and "is
Philippine independence a Fresent
Possibility?"
To supplement and illuminate his
lectures Mr. Worcester has made an
extraordinary collection of Philippine
motion pictures. These cover in
striking manner the wild tribes, as
well as many other features of island
life.
Bryan, as Trouper, Stirs U. S. and Europe |J0 UPHEAVAL SEX HYGIENE IN
+•+ +•+ •!••+ •h*+ +»4* +*•!• +•+ +•+ +•+ +•+ +•+
Premier Is Ridiculed as a ‘Tent Show Star’
Secretary of State Appears Every
Night With Tyrolean Yodlers
and a Gypsy Violinist.
M ISS ISABEL GRAUS, Gypsy violinist of the Bryan show,
and (below) Secretary Bryan, the chief attraction,
leaving the tent.
The Bryan Lecture as a Money
Maker.
Since entering President Wilson’s
Cabinet Mr. Bryan has spent much
time on the Chautauqua circuit. He
received hie traveling expenses, a
guarantee of $250 for each lecture and
50 per cent of all receipts in excess of
$500. These lectures have been de
livered since March 4:
July 13—Hendersonville, N. C., $250.
July 17—Mountain Lake Park, Ind.,
$250.
July 20—Winona Lake, Ind., two
free.
July 21—Gary, Ind., $375.
July 22—Oelwein, Iowa, $250.
July 24-r-Adel, Iowa, $600.
July 23—Panora, Iowa, $250.
Aug. 28—Lambertville, N. J. ( $400.
Sept. 1—Chestertown, Md., $250.
Sept. 8—Salisbury, Md.. $750.
Sept. 9—Crisfield, Md., $250.
Sept. 10—Media, Pa., $250.
Sept. 10—Glenolden, Pa., $250.
Sept. 12—Phoenixville, Pa., $250.
Sept. 12.—Woodbury, N. J., $250.
Sept. 13—Charleston, W. Va., $250.
Sept. 13—Woodstock, Va., $250.
Total, $5,025.
WOODSTOCK,*VA., Sept. 13—Wil
liam J. Bryan. Secretary of State, ad
dressed a large gathering here to
night and pocketed $250 and his
specified share of the gate receipts.
He came from Charleston, W. Va.,
and will go on to Staunton. President
Wilson’s birthplace, on Tuesday.
The performance, or rather the lec
ture, compared favorably with that
in Media, Pa., a few days ago and at
Glenolden.
Glenolden had the advantage of
Madia, because at the former place
no popcorn or pink lemonade booths
iVere allowed outside. At Glenolden
these accessories of the circus were
not lacking. The peanut privilege,
while not a lucrative one, was a noisy
one. “Peanuts, chocolates and chew
ing gum.”
“Ice cream cones and brick ice
cream!” These cries greeted Mr. Bry
an as he came up in an automobile
that was parked with half a hundred
more on the old circus lot where the
Chautauqua tent was pitched.
“There Isn’t Any Elephant.”
A little boy who insisted upon hav
ing peanuts as he was dragged along
by his mother declared he t wanted
them to feed the elephant.
“There isn’t any elephant. Willie.”
said his mother.
“Yes, there is; they got a tent,” he
French Paper Sees in His Per
formance Reason for Success
of Tammany,
Special Cable to The American.
PAR1F. Sept. 13.—The Times' lead
ing editorial on foreign affairs, edited
ami usually written by Andre Turdieu.
one of the under secretaries of the
Department of Foreign Affairs, and
accepted generally by the European
press as dtrectly inspired utterances
reflecting the opinions of foreign of
fice heads, is devoted to-night to
ridiculing Secretary of Htute Bryan
r?
• *< ■■■■■■ v ' wfY’w*
mvtAVQVA-
•Ip- •
walled as she moved on with him to
where the crowd was in line.
There must have been several pei -
sons under the same Impression as to
the use to which the tent was being
put, because the almost incessant
cracking of well-roasted goobers in
the rear seats punctuated the lecture
of the Secretary and at times made
it difficult for those in the extreme
rear seats to hear clearly.
The really disappointed boys, how
ever, were those who carried water
for the band and the other talent to
get free tickets and those who crawled
in under the canvas who found the
show not up to expectations to the
Juvenile portion of the crowd
Lament of a C a nvasman.
One of the canvasmen who had a
seat along the side of the tent, wall
surrounding the lot aired his woes
while Mr. Bryan was speaking.
"I’m sorry I Joined,” he walled.
"This ain’t a regular show, and the
boss canvasman is a Swarthmore
student. What he don’t know about
putting up a big tent would fill a
book. What they ought to do with
this business is take there here
Tyroleans. That boy champion is
good and is as fine a yodler as there
Is in the business, and I have been
seeing concerts with circuses for a
long time way back with the Sells
show. They ought to take and con
solidate them and that band and then
go into Philly and get a good lot and
play two a day right along.
Bryan Could Commute.
"Mr. Bryan could commute from
Washington. We could let him close
the afternoon show and put him on
number one for the night show, and
we would get some money. These
people are amateurs. I’m sorry I
joined out. You see the way It was,
I used to be with the old Forepaugh
show, and when I saw the tent I Just
naturally asked for work."
Contrary to the general opinion, the
artists dividing time with Bryan and
holding the crowd until he arrives do
not feel particularly puffed up over
the fact that they are on the same
bill with him.
Gus Oechner, the champion yodler,
at Media, this afternoon, was con
gratulated on getting a bigger hand
than Mr. Bryan at the close of his
act.
"That ain’t much,” said another.
"Anna Umley got a better hand than
he did on her zither act.”
"No, we arc not sore at his taking
the spotlight," said on** of ttie troupe,
after changing to street clothes and
taking his make-up off, "Mr. Graus.
our manager, will tell you we have
played with some of the best. We
don't care where they put us on a
bill. We can follow an animal act or
Strange Series of Movements of
Earth on Coast Thought Due
to Subterranean Lake.
SEATTLE, WASH., Sept. 13,—A
strange series of upheavals of the
land in a little district in Skamania
Gounty, Washington, had caused won
der and «ome consternation among
the settlers. State Forester Kerris,
who 1ms just returned from the rather
Isolated legion near Stevenson, where
he viewed the result* of nature's out
breaks. is at a loss to explain the
phenomena
Within five miles of Stevenson a
man planted a garden a year ago in a
fertile little area Just below the house.
Bast spring he planted in the same
spot which nature hud elevated to a
position cosiderably above the house.
This name Tancher pumps water from
a lake into a tank and carries it
from the tank to the house In buried
pipes. Several times he Iuls had to
remove Joints from the pipe to coun
teract the contortions of the earth on
his farm.
A lake that user! to he in a corner
of the field is now removed to another
quarter, while the lake bottom is
transformed into a little hillock. In
the center of a little lake in another
part of the area an island has ap
peared within a few months.
War Veteran Regains
Sight Lost in Battle
Dazed by Things He Sees Since Suc
cessful Operation, He Declines
$100 Pension.
PITTSBURG. Sept. 13.—Isaac
Gates, of West Virginia, a veteran
of the Civil War and blind since he
was affected by a wound at Chancel-
lorsville, left the Eye and Ear Hos
pital after an operation the other day
possessing full sight and so happy
that he has talked ever since about
the wonderful things he sees.
He i* dazed by *the hundreds of
modern things.
Just before the operation he was
offered by the Government a pension
of $100 a month. He sent word io
Washington that the Government ma>’
keep the pension; he is happy with
out it.
"I am 77,” he said, "but talk about
enjoyment! I did not know ttfhat
life’s charms were until 1 got back
my eyoeight. The years that I was
blind made a great difference to me.
Now I am enjoying myself.”
PASTOR'S PLEA
Chicago Clergyman Also Urges
That Subject Be Taught in
the Churches.
CHICAGO, Kept. 13,—«The teaching
of sex hygiene in the church and
Sunday achool was ndvoted in
a sermon by the Rerv. W. H.
Head, of Chicago, preaching at the
Rochelle. Ill., Methodist Church.
“Det the preacher and Sunday
school teacher teach sex hygiene,” lia
said, “and not turn it over to hire
lings.
“Much has been said about eu
genics. bnt to prohibit marriage ab
solutely (among the sick) will bo
only increasing the evil. To make
marriage too difficult is to create a
condition where marriage laws are*
ignored.”
Says Extract of Beef
Causes Intoxication
Liverpool Doctor Finds That Teeto
taler's Drink Produces Effects f
of Alcoholic Poisoning. /
Special Gable to The American.
LONDON. Sept. 13.—A LiverpooT
doctor declares all the symptoms of
alcoholic poisoning are caused by the
consumption of large quantities of
meat extract. This Is a favorite tee
total beverage, and to say that it pro -
duces a special kind of intoxication is
.somewhat of a paradox.
A patient of whose habits there
could be no question went to the Liv- j
erpool doctor with every sign of alco
holic poisoning, and an inquiry proved
definitely that his state resulted solely
from a habit he had formed of taking
meat juices in several forms.
Some rather similar cases, say the
expert, have occurred from eating ex
cessive, though not apparently bulky,
portions of cereal foods.
C0LLEGE”gIRLS WILL I BE
TAUGHT SWIMMING ART
OXFORD, OHIO, Sept. 13.—The
Western College for "Women Is build
ing a swimming pool for Its students
in the basement of Lite new $20,000
gymnasium building, noiv nearing
completion. The pool will be 22x40
feet, with a depth of 3 to 7 1-2 feet.
Miss Mary Luclle Cook, physical di
rector of the college. Is spending the
summer at the seashore, learning to
swim, and when she returns this full
she will face the task of teaching
235 girls the art.
McMillan Bros. Sterling Farm
Seeds tor Fall Planting
Write for our fall catalog on Hairy Vetch, Crimson Clover, Dwf.
Essex Rape, Georgia Rye. Winter Barley, Appier Oats, Winter Graz
ing and Red Rust Proof Oats. Seed Wheat, Alfalfa and other Glovers,
Pasture and Lawn Grasses. Onion Sets, Dutch Bulbs. In fact, a man
with a farm, garden or lawn, can get most everything here in an
up-to-date variety.
“ARCH” McMillan Bros. Seed Co.
12 S. Broad Street.—Note Our Number.—The
Bell Phone M. 3076.
Bridge Block.
Atlanta 593.
Not for Money
:_By JAMES J. MONTAGUE-
Seeretary Bryan has rnbleA to a French newspaper that he is lecturing
not for money, but simply to educate the people.
Y OUNG man, if you lack the acquisitive knack,
If your money fades into thin air,
Don’t think there’s no chance in the realm of finance
And give away to utter despair.
You can easily be in the class with John D.,
George Gould and Charles W. Morse,
If you’ll merely come through with a dollar or two
On the Doc’s educational course. . #
G O and hear how the Doc whose bland soul it would shock
To think of the evil called greed,
Counts his house every night lest the treasurer might
Get away with an overlooked seed.
Though he looks upon cash as the veriest trash,
He’ll teach you to keep it by force;
Not a cent will you burn if your lesson you learn
Ilf the Doc’s educational course.
Y OU’LL observe how it pays to spend years, months and days
In hunting a job you can’t land,
If the spotlight you keep while less foxy men sleep
And always go round with a band.
You will learn that to grace a good Cabinet place
As an ad. beats a two-headed horse,
You will never know need if you’ll only pay heed
To the Doc’s educational course.
H OW kind of the Doc. who has tucked in his sock
All he’d need for the next thousand years,
Thus to bustle around and tell youths how to found
Good, solid, financial careers!
And if all the while he sees with a smile
More dollars heap up in the vault
And his holdings accrue while he educates you.
Remember, it isn’t his fault!
for his appearance with a traveling
tent show.
The caption over the editorial is
“The Bryan Sketch,” and his part in
the show is treated as vaudeville.
The editorial says Mr. Bryan’s en
terprise Is especially dangerous in
this age. when the tendency of the
public is to despise diplomacy as
futile, or at least to refuse to take
(diplomats seriously.
“A few more samples of this kind
and the public will lose all faith,’’ it
goes on. It is pointed out that Mr.
Bryan’s “antics” really call for an
essay on American manners and
morals, illustrating once again that in
the United States a political career is
esteemed as a most mediocre pro
fession, hence inferior men have been
predominant in American politics
throughout the last century, all citi
zens of marked ability and of pro
nounced intelligence religiously keep
ing out of politics, and the really able
men going into business, from which
position they use politicians, but nev
er hold office.
Thus Tammany has proffered, to
pcison America’s magnificent soil.” It
also says the best American tradition
of dignity is now entirely confined to
“out-of-the-way” Boston and similar
corners, from which types of men like
Olney and Lodge, must witness the
“vaudevillian" Secretary of State,
whereas the “widest chasm separates
these responsible citizens from the
public’s approval.”
Juggler or any of the rest of them
“Why, we would not be afraid to
let Mr. Bryan take the middle of the
bill or go on No. 4. Say, that cuckoo
.song that * )echner sings won the
championship in Switzerland for him.
It was a great contest. See, the pro
gram says it,” and he pointed to
where, in small type on the Inside, it
was announced "the boy yodler of the
troupe won the championship In a
great contest in Switzerland.”
Mr. Bryan has announced diplomat
ically that he was going to remain
on the Chautauqua circuit. He said
th**re were now 1,000 of them. Fie
spoke of the pleasure he felt in ad
dressing the members and audiences
they drew, and what a proud privi
lege it was of his to do so, and said:
German Papers Score
Bryan As Vaudevillian.
Special Cable to The American.
BERLIN, Sept. 13.—Secretary Bry
an’s plan to work the vaudeville cir
cuit has evoked much derisive com
ment in the German press.
The dignified Vosslche Zeltung says
Bryan has a fine busrnes talent. If
it were not known that Bryan will not
serve a drop of wine, even to diplo
mats, it adds, “one would be tempted
to believe this idea of organizing a
circus was due to a moment of jovial
stimulation.”
The Revests Nsehrichten suggests
Mr. Bryan is trying to show * :m»
America's poorly paid public officials
are obliged “either to steal or adopt
Bryan methods.”
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DR. HUGHES,
OPPOSITE THIRD NATIONAL BANK.
16V* N. BROAD ST.. ATLANTA* GA