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EDITORIAL PAGE The Atlanta Georgian THE HOME PAPER
THE ATLANTA GEORGIAN
Published by THK OKOBOIA.N COMPACT
At iO East Alabama St. Atlanta, /la ^
Fnterfk! ** nerond-clsse matter at soetofflo* at Atlanta, undar act of Mar«i ». lari
REARST'8 SUNDAY AMERICAN an<3 THE ATLANTA OEOROIAN wUl
ha mailed to subscribers anywhere In rhs United 8tatss, Canada and Mailoo.
or* month for 9 *6, three months for 11.78; change of addrsf" made aa oftan aa
desired Foreign subscription rates on application.
The South, the Church, the
Sabbath and the State
It is time for Religion to have its innings, and the Church of
God its revival in the hearts of men.
This old South of ours, which is not less old because It is al
together new, is the citadel, both of real Americanism and of
genuine Orthodoxy in this Republic. The faith of the Fathers has
its abiding place where the Sons of the Fathers are most In evi
dence. And here in the Souths—here in Georgia—the old race,
the old order and the old glorious Americanism has its best ex
pression.
It is the comment throughout the country that the South is
more American, more Orthodox, more representative than any
other section of the country. There are thoughtful men who look
to the South to save the American ideals in our people. There are
thousands who look to the South to preserve the ancient faith and
the stalwart character of the Republic.
This is a repute that is well worth while from every point of
view—moral, spiritual and material. It makes the South unique,
respected, and to be desired.
The church has recorded splendid progress in these reoent
years. It has manifested progress, modernity, charity and the
larger humanity of helpfulness to all men. It is more tolerant
and less dogmatic. It is shorn of something of the tyranny of
clergy, and is at once more democratic, more liberal and more
humane!
The years have taught the church and the clergy some
mighty lessons that they need to know. The church is more in
touch with men.
You men and women of Georgia who have drifted away
from the church into the absorptions of business and pleasure
ought to drift back to-morrow to observe the vitality, the al
truism, charity and the adaptability it has learned. Yon ought
to go to church again for the sake of the old mother who loved
you and at whose knee you lisped the aspirations that make your
character to-day.
You ought to go to church Sunday for the sake of your
father, who in that earlier day was a defender of the faith.
You ought to go to church Sunday for the sake of your sons
and daughters, who are treading in your footsteps, to take your
place in the world, and who you know could not possibly plant
their ideals and their characters upon a nobler foundation than
the Rock of Ages.
You—Presbyterians, Methodists, Baptists, Episcopalians,
Disciples, Unitarians, Catholics—owe it to all things that you
should look in Sunday thoughtfully and reverently upon that
great institution within which you all were raised, and see what
it has learned and what you may learn, and what you may do
to help the oldest, the safest, the helpfulest and the soundest in
stitution that your magnificent civilization has known.
We have Atlanta Day, Memorial Day, Washington Day,
National Day, Christmas Day. Now let us have Church Day
on God's Day. Let everybody go to church Sunday.
And let the preachers who occupy the pulpits to mighty
throngs to-morrow be awake to the responsibility of this Mighty
Day, and be sure to preach the doctrines of helpfulness and for
giveness and charity that will hold for other days the eager,
restless, active, practical, and not ungodly race of men.
In these days of too few hours of light and much Christmas
shopping the traffic in the streets is doubled because of the many
delivery wagons and vehicular traffic generally. Just in that
proportion is the danger increased to the women shoppers and
men, too. In crossing the street it is well to watch the traffic
policeman. Obey his signals, but if confused seek safety by his
side. His position is a trying one, but he is very human, and the
knowledge that a bewildered man or woman has sought safety
by his side appeals to him. There is the gratification of knowing
that he is appreciated, and his standing in the rain and cold, is
not in vain.
STARS AND STRIPES
Police raided a wedding in Con
necticut Probably wanted to
rescue the bridegroom.
• • •
English authorities, by arrest
ing Mrs. Pankhurst on the high
seas, perpetrated a low trick.
• • •
Colonel Roosevelt has been pre
sented with an Argentine horse.
Will It pull with the Bull Moose?
• • •
Pair of eggshell plates sold in
London for only $184- Would
have brought a higher price in
Atlanta.
• * •
Undertakers In Paterson, N. J-.
are establishing a correspondence
school to teach the reassembling
of mangled bodies. Extending
their sphere bit bj bit.
* * •
Film with President Wilson’s
smile is to be kept in a sealed
•ox for 100, years. Should get
& bout the time the Mexican
♦action it sattled.
Seven betrothals recorded in
Boston college in seven weeks.
Surprising amount of ignorance
in a college, too.
• • •
Gotham Plumbers’ Association
reporta to the police that flOO.-
000 in materials have been stolen
during the year. Should be some
way to stop this leak.
* • •
Military authorities have re
fused to allow arms shipped into
Ireland However, the Irish will
still be abla to kick for Home
Rule.
• • •
Secretary Bryan must lecture to
keep his far mrunning. Might
try the race track.
• • * •
"Savants seek microbe of bald
ness " Should lie easy to find: it
hasn’t much cover
• • *
Naw York man shot by his
brother for going to work. Ah,
the old New York aristocratic
epirtt.
Christmas Is Coming
All Marriage Is a Leap Into the Dark
By DOROTHY DIX
T HE newspapers have recent
ly contained account* of
the marriage of a middle-
aged couple who had never met
until the wedding day, and in
which the bridegroom had never
seen the bride's face until she
lifted the heavy veil she wore aft
er the ceremony was performed
It is the custom among many
Oriental people for a man to thug
marry, sight unseen, and to get
his first glimpse of his wife after
it is too late to return her to the
bargain counter in case she
doesn’t come up to his ideaJ of fe
male pulchritude, but, so far as
is known, this Is the first time
an American man has entered the
holy state without taking a squint
at his fellow'-adventurer to see
wdiethcr she was a peach or a
lemon.
Of c ourse, we a-11 know that ap
pearances are deceptive, and the
eye is the poorest of all guides
to go by, especially in Judging a
woman. Still, the faithful candi
date for matrimony has felt that
he must do what he could to
protect himself against unneces
sary risks, and, at least, pick out
a wife that looked good to him.
Honce the world stands appalled
at the reckless bravado of the
man who has added one more
foolhardy ha-zard to the Rig Gam
ble by marrying a lady whose
countenance he has never beheld.
Yet, after all, does this man
who m urrles the veiled lady take
’'e much bigger chance, even on
her looks, than does every ther
man who takes a wife?
No Woman Looks To-day
as She Will Look To
morrow.
For what a woman looks like
to-day she wi" not look like to
morrow, nor the day after, nor
the years after that. . Romeo
iswears that he knows every
curve and dimple of Juliet s face,
and every adorable expression
that flits across It. But what
about the sharp angles, and wrin
kles, and hollows, and crow's-feet
that sickness, or age, or temper
changes it into?
The truth is that all marriage
is a leap into th dark, and the
result depends so completely
upon accident that sometimes one
is tempted to think that the
grabbag principle of ^electing a
husband or wife is just us good
as any other.
It Is one of the most tragical
facts of existence that there
seems to be no wav of judging
beforehand what sort of a hus
band or w-lfe any man or woman
will make, and that all the ordi
nary tests of charatcer by which
we Judge people fail absolutely
before the acid test of matrimony.
For Instance, our rough ideal of
a fine man is a man who is hon
est, upright, just in his dealings
with others, and a liberal spend
er. If, in addition to these quali
ties, we can say that he is a
good son, we feel that we have
described a paragon that any
women ought to thank God for
getting.
Rut does the possession of
these admirable qualities insure
that a, man will make a good
husband? It does not.
Many a man who is as sober
as the town pump, and a6 do
mestic as the house cat, and as
upright as the moral law, is a
grum grouch at home, and a
grinding tyrant whose wife trem
bles before him. Many a mun
who is liberal to the outside world
is a tightwad to his wife, or else
he’s so generous about setting up
drinks for the boys that there’s
never enough money to buy his
wife shoes. Many a man who is
just to his employees is cruelly
unfair to his wife, and even the
good son not infrequently con
siders it perfectly fair to offer up
his wife as a sacrifice to his
mother.
No woman can estimate what
sort of a husband a man will
make by the esteem in which he
is held by the world, for there is
nothing truer than the old French
proverb which says that there are
men “who are the joy of the
street and the sorrow of the
home.”
So every woman who marries
really goes it blind. She has no
possible way of telling what sort
of a husband she is getting.
And the man who marries
takes equal risks. He picks out a
girl who appears to be pretty,
and sweet, and amiable, and in
dustrious, and economical, but no
human being except the girl and
her mother—and they won’t tell
—know whether she possesses
those virtues in reality, or if she
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lias just assumed them as bait
wherewith to catch a huaband.
Many a poor man who has been
captured by a beautiful face haa
found out that the good looks all
canjp off with the paint and pow
der and false hair and transfor
mations that were too much trou
ble to be worn every day for a
mere husband. Many an unfor
tunate man haa ascertained that
the girl who was so meek and
mild that butter wouldn’t melt In
her mouth before marriage turns
into a shrew and a virago after
marriage. Many a man who mar
ries a poor girl because he wants
a thrifty and industrious wife
finds out that the girl who haa
had to work and economize be
fore marriage goes on a perfect
orgy of spending and self-indul
gence as soon as she’s got a man
to toll for her.
On the other hand, many a girl
who haa been a silly little butter
fly before marriage becomes a
household grub afterward,
many a girl who has been a gay
little flirt before marriage turns
into the most devoted of wives,
and many a, girl who has been
extravagant becomes a model of
thrift when she has her hus
band's money to handle.
No Soothsayer Can Warn
a Man in Time to
Do Him Good.
And no soothsayer can warn a
man in time to do him any good
of which way the cat is going to
jump.
Matrimony is a case in which
you never can tell what will hap
pen, or how people will turn out,
and, In effect, we all wear veils
before our faces and over our
characters when we get married,
and our husbands and wives
never really see us as we are un
til after the ceremony. Or else,
perhaps, there would be no more
wedding bells.
In=Shoots
Observation will generally
prove that the booster always
gets out of breath before the
knocker.
• * *
When friendship gets beyond
the cold feet stage it is some
times called love.
» * «
The rich father-in-iaw is often
the worst tightwad of ail _
Ella Wheeler Wilcox
—ON—
Parents and Children—The Most Important Duties
of Parenthood Are Often Left to Teachers.
What Are You Doing for Your Children?
By ELLA WHEELER WILCOX
“I’
Copyright, ISIS,
’T la an appalling fact that this
Institution, preservative of
all Institutions, If It Is to be
judged by some modern homee.
Is actually In danger of becoming
a serious menace to American life
and national righteousness. The
well-regulated home, where there
Is mutual affection and respect, a
kind and Jnst exercise of authority,
unquestioning obedience, mutual
helpfulness, and the cherishing of
those great principles which lie at
the foundation of the Christian
religion, is the only hope for the
larger and national life. Without
such homes the people of this
country cannot expect, and have
no right to expect, a government
that will maintain Justice, equity,
and right, and whose social order
and Institutions will be perpet
uated.
“For the most part father has
legenerated Into or been succeeded
by ‘daddy’ or ‘dad,’ who Is merely
a convenient fellow, when he hap
pens to be at home, for a riotous
romp or for receiving orders to
buy this or that, and who has no
more authority m Influence In the
family government than one of the
*klde.’ While mother—well, as a
general rule, nurse has taken her
place In the home, and frequently
an Incapable and unconsclentloue
nurse whose Influence Is anything
but good.
"The Tclds’ (there a-re no chil
dren now), Instead of being taught
self-denial, self-restraint, and re
spect for others and for the rights
of others, demand and are yielded
the fullest measure of unregulated
liberty and license and gelf-lndul-
gence; in other words, they are
practically left to rear themselves
according to their own ‘sweet
wills. 1
"Much might also be said of the
lamentable lack of parental care
and oversight as to the dally and
nightly whereabouts of the larger
sons and daughters, the doubtful
character of the entertainments
frequented by them, and the de
moralizing literature admitted Into
the home, as well as other threat
ening evils.’’
—WM. B. THORWGTOX.
HOW LARGE THY TASKT
H OW largo thy taek, O teacher
of the young!
To take the ravelled threads
by parents flung
With careless hand*—end through
consummate care
To weave a fabric, line and Arm
and fair;
God’s uncompleted work Is thine to
do—
Be brave and true.
—ELLA WHEELER WTIAJOX.
ANT parents who read the
words of Mr. Thorlngton
will resent them. Yet
they are needed words, and pain
fully true of a large percentage of
American homes and parents.
Are you a parent of grown chil
dren?
If so. just what do you know of
their methods of enjoyment, out
side the home, or even at home?
Do you take a sympathetic In
terest In all their pleasures, and
do you try to make them feel you
are their friend, and that you have
not forgotten your own youth?
Are they on such happy terms
with you that they tell you all
their little secrets and talk over
all their hopes and ambitions and
longings? Have you made your
own son feel respect and a high
M
toy SUr Company.
»enee of responsibility toward all
women?
Does he understand that sex re
lations are sacred matters, and
that any light or low view of th*
subject Is fraught with enormous
dangers for him and for his de
scendants?
Unless a young man know* tM*
from the scientific and medical
side, he Is not well equipped to go
about seeking for social pleasures
In safety. He is In danger him.
self, and he Is liable to become *
menace to those with whom ho
associates.
Has your young daughter any
knowledge of herself os a woman
and a possible mother of another
generation, which will protect he#
from disaster, morally or phj*>
leally?
Possibly, being your daughter
you feel she must be safe from
doing any foolish or wrong act.
But you must remember how
many other ancestors have given
her tendencies and qualities and
Impulses of which you know
nothing.
First and foremost She is a tnv
man being, a part of nature, and
ehe will pass through the same
stages of development which flow
ers and plants and animal* pass
through.
Just as the tree buds and then
flowers, and then bears fruit, so
every normal woman experiences
these Instincts to carry on nature’s
work.
But as she cannot perform these
functions as naturally and frankly
as the things in the vegetable and
animal kingdom do, she needs
guidance and protection through
the romantic bud and flower pe
riod of her unfoldment. Tenden
cies which an unkind and undls-
crimlnatlng world might call evil
are simply natural tendencies for
mating and bearing offspring.
They show themselves In romantic
impulses and a desire to enjoy the
society of the opposite sex.
That desire Should be gratified,
but it should be guided and pro
tected.
Are yon protecting your daugh
ter?
Do yon know whait hours she
keeps with her callers, and when
she visits her girl friends, do you
know what places They visit and
who are their escorts, and what
hour she reaches her rooms?
If you are parents of small chil
dren, are you giving them any
foundation of good manners and
agreeable behavior and kindly In
stincts, which will make them
tractable students when they be
gin to attend school, and will
cause the tendrils of their young
minds to reach np to lovely quali
ties, Instead of trailing down Into
the dust of selflshneo* and the
mire of Immorality?
The most Important duties of
parenthood are often cast an th*
burdened shoulders of teachers-
Having brought a child Into the
world and to a school age Is not
all of the responsibility of a father
and mother. Not even when ac
companied by generosity and a
willingness to pay teachers to do
the work neglected at home.
Nothing can ever quite recom
pense a child who has reached the
age of ten without having received
the loving, careful training of a
patient mother or father in the
small, gracious things which make
up dally conduct.
Any parent, however poor, can
teach a child to speak low, to avoid
flat contradictions, to be respectful
to elders, to sit correctly, to par
take of food silently and enter
and leave a room gracefully. So,
too, can any parent who has right
Instincts, avoid having a child hear
gossip or unkind criticism or ooarse
language.
Are you doing all these things?
V.
The Father of Science
By REV. THOMAS B. GREGORY.
O N the 10th of December, of
the year 212 B. C., perished
the great Archimedes, mur
dered by a brutal, ignorant Ro
man soldier, as he sat with
bowed head in his house at Syra
cuse thinking out the mighty
problems of science.
Archimedes was born at Syra
cuse, Sicily, 287 B. C„ and was,
therefore, at the time of his
death 75 years old. He was the
greatest man of his day, and will
ever rank as one of the pro-
foundest thinkers and reasoners
of all time. In mathematics and
natural philosophy he had no peer
on eimh. and it Is not too much to
say that he is fairly entitled to
be called the "Father of Science.”
He would have discovered the
differential calculus had algebra
been known in his day, and he
came very near doing so even as
it was. He anticipated the as
tronomical system, subsequently
worked out by Copernicus. He
laid the foundation of hydro
statics. He invented the method
for the determination of specific
gravity. He formulated the true
theory of the lever and u%ered
the ever famous wards "aive me
whereon to stand and I will move
the earth.” In theoretical me
chanics no advance was made
upon his ideas during the eight
een centuries betw-een him and
Leonardo da Vinci.
It was Archimedes who invent
ed the endless screw, the most
important mechanical contrivance
known to science. FTom the
teeming brain of the old Syra
cusan came also the idea of the
screw pump, the hydraulic en
gine and the burning mirr r. He
was the creator of the catapult,
the artillery of the olden time,
whose dreadful bolts were the
terror of ancient armies. He In
vented another engine, the pon
derous claws of vhlch, reaching
over the walls, lifted up ships and
their crews and then suddenly
dropped them into the sea, while
with his great “sun glasses" he
was able to set on Are such of
the enemies’ ships as could not be
reached with the grappling ma
chine.
It took the world 2,000 year?
to produce the equal of the
mighty intellect i.iuit, was brutal
ly snuffed out by the blow from
the inace of that brutal Roman
ttlidiAC.
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