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THE HOME RARER
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EDITORIAL
page The Atlanta Georgian
THE ATLANTA GEORGIAN
Published by THE GEORGIAN COMP Y
At 20 East Alabama St. Atlanta •
filtered orrnnd- rla>»s matter at postnfflct at Atlanta. • u ' of March 3 v »
HF.ARST’S SI’NHAY AMERICAN and THE ATI - A * ' 1 »'• •Rf'IAN '-111
• m i are In ’he T’nlt#..i • . ■ v
one month for $.60: throe months for $1."5, all mi ntl ■ ' * r
f, - j- (in elm nge of addresr made as often as desired. For# an Hub- < rip: .on
rates cn npphcuflon.
Letters From the Readers of The Georgian
HIS VIEW OF ATLANTA.
Editor The Georgian:
Atlanta! New York of the
South’ Prosperity personified!
Home of hospitality, broad-mind
edness and pood business! With
these thoughts prominent and
foretn <st in my mind. 1 made the
step that brought me here from
a hustling Northern city. I had
come in contact with many in
fluential business men who
praised the city for its prosper
ous activity. Thus it was with
tho most pleasant anticipation
that 1 and my family came to
Atlanta.
Colonel Paxon and Mr. Adair
have been quoted as saying that
as resultant of the “vice war”
the evil has been scattered in -
stead <*f exterminated. Having
average good sight, 1 agree with
these gentlemen Furthermore, I
may id that the fair name and
prestige of Atlanta is becoming
besmirched by the “vice crusade”
methods at present here in vogue.
That 1 have settled in Atlanta
is a fact. I have bought a home
here. 1 have Invested consider
able money in my business. I
have brought from up North
worknv n, employees They are
good workers, and during their
hours are industrious and well
meaning as could be wished for;
but after hours their time is their
own, and. being average men,
they desire relaxation in the av
erage way They And little of
passable enjoyment here. After
the day's work they are naturally
tirr-d enough to desire their home
and rest. On Sunday morning
they go to service. Perhaps aft
er dinner they wish to Indulge in
a game of billiards, and later a
“movie.” But the doors to these
harmless• amusements are closed
to them. To use their words, “The
town is closed up tighter than a
am."
(Now. these men are necessary
> my business, as men of their
trade are scarce in Atlanta. Al
though 1 pay them, perhaps, bet
ter wages than (hey could receive
tip Norths still u is a question of
OUT OF BUSINESS!
We
Learn BY TRYING
♦
•
And a Little Child Must Learn to Walk SOME IIME. This
( •
Refers to Government Ownership.
(Copyright, 1913.)
The Hearst newspapers, year after year, talked and urged
parcel post—which means government ownership of the coun
try's express business.
Some said that parcel post would be criminal. Nearly every
body said it was bound to be a failure.
The express companies explained that the people were not
intelligent enough to do what the express companies did.
But parcel post is here AND IT EARNED FOR THE GOV
ERNMENT ABOUT THIRTY MILLIONS OF DOLLARS THE
FIRST YEAR.
And as a result of parcel post, the postoffice of the United
States is now on a paying basis for the first time since 1883.
To put government work on a paying basis is, of course, not
the most important thing. The most important thing is good
work and ECONOMICAL SERVICE FOR THE PEOPLE.
The people could afford parcel post because of its conven
ience, usefulness and economy, even if it didn’t mean a profit
to the government.
But the fact that the government makes millions our of par
cel post and now runs its own express business in such a way
as to make the whole postoffice profitable ought to convince some
of the doubters.
We are through advocating parcel post, for it is here. We
are still advocating government ownership, and municipal own
ership of other things. And municipal and national ownership
will come.
THERE WILL BE MISTAKES MADE. BUT WE LEARN
BY TRYING.
Some things are done by private individuals, spurred on by
love of power and money, a little better perhaps than the gov
ernment will do those things at first,. But the government WILL
DO THEM.
It would be foolish to send a little child out to walk in a
crowded street at first, but it must learn to walk some time. And
eventually the crowded street will not frighten it.
It would be a mistake, undoubtedly, for the government,
national or municipal, to try to run every public service AT
ONCE, but the government, that is to say, the people, must
learn to do these things, and will to them.
The people will own and manage for their benefit all of the
NATURAL MONOPOLIES that have been misused by private
individuals for private benefit.
And you may make up your mind to that.
The government will own and run railroads, telegraph and
in time many other things that need not be suggested at present.
Meanwhile, observe that the first thing actually tried, the
parcel post, is a success.
And get over your pessimism about the power of the people
to do things instead of having them done.
The combined intelligence of the people in the long run is
better and abler than the individual.
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The American merchant marine has almost vanished from the seas, thanks to our shipping laws.
The passage of the proposed Seamen’s bill would lay up what is left of it altogether.
only a short time before they
leave. It is only by strong per
sonal feeling that they hold on
here with me. With average men
of average habits it is a matter
of enjoyment of life, as well as
dollars, that counts.
And thus, although this is in a
way a personal matter, I feel
sure that I do not alone hold
these views. Again quoting Mr.
Adair regarding the vice crusade:
‘if it were put to a vote, an over
whelming majority of the citizens
of Atlanta would decide to return
to a condition of sanity.”
I. LESTER.
No. 55 Stokes avenue, Atlanta,
Ga.
MR. ADAIR AND CHIEF BEAVERS.
Editor The Georgian:
In reading The Georgian l see
an attack begun by business men
on the vice crusade, which I
highly indorse. I am glad, as
well as many others, to see the
commencement of this tight, and
earnestly hope it will be fought
to a finish. It has not only hurt
the respectable residence sections
of the city, but has put our girls
in the hands of every man they
go out with. Vice is something
that has been since* the world be
gan, and will be till it ends. It
seems that Mr. Adair is attack
ing our right honorable Chief
Beavers about catching some of
the criminals. It is true that he
catches them, but what does he
do with them? Take, for instance,
the pickpockets caught in the
WlnecolT Hotel—where are they
now? I know positively that at
least two of them have left town,
and he has a “swell” chance of
getting them back. There are also
immoral houses all over this city,
and if he doesn't know of their
existence he is about the only
rnan who doesn’t.
Mr. Adair and Mr. Bax on are
on the right track, and I want to
see this movement pushed to Un-
finish. 1 think this is the senti
ment of nearly all our citizens.
A SUBSCRIBER.
Atlanta, Ga.
A Clock TSiat Keeps Time for the World
It Is Located on the Eiffel Tower, Paris, but, Being East of Green
wich, Must Receive Its Time from That Station.
By GARRETT P. SERVISS
T HE electric world-clock Into
which the Eiffel Tower In
Paris has been transformed
continues to excite the liveliest In
terest In western Europe, where
It is easy for anybody, with the
aid of very simple wireless tele
graph apparatus, to receive the
time signals radiated at fixed
hours over sea and land.
Eiffel Tow er Makes Fine
Station for Wireless
Signals.
The Eiffel Tower has been
chosen for this purpose because
Its immense height, nearly a thou
sand feet, Rives it a distinct advan
tage as a sending station for wire
less signals. But at the very mo
ment when this linger of steel
pointing skyward out of the heart
of Paris becomes, as it were, a
clock-hand for the whole planet,
the meridian of Paris is officially
abandoned.
The order has Just gone forth
that henceforth the Connalstancg
dC' Tempt, the famous French
astronomical almanac, shall have
its calculations based on the me
ridian of Greenwich -the prime
meridian that all the civilized
world now recognizes as the start
ing lino fbr the reckoning of time.
The world's standard wireless
telegraph timepiece does not keep
•tep with the hours as they flit
across the world's standard merid
ian of time, and an allowance for
difference of longitude has to be
made by everybody who receives
the signals from the Eiffel Tower,
if ho wishes to know what the true
world-time is. What he gets la
Par's time
p, u the observatory oi Parts
which automatically, by an electric
clock, transmits to the Eiffel
Tower the time signals that are
radiated over the globe, and then-
time signals are regulated by tho
passage of stars across the merid
ian of Paris, and not that of Green
wleh. But Parts Is situated 2 de
grees 20 minutes and 15 second of
longitude west of Greenwich,
corresponding to a difference of 9
minutes and 21 seconds of time,
which must be either added to or
subtracted from the indications of
the signals in order that standard
world-time may be obtained,
the observer is west of Paris
must add the extra time to get the
hour at Greenwich, and if he is
east he must subtract.
It is true that such calculation is
not difficult, but it is annoying and
may lead to error, so that the ideal
will not be attained until a great
central transmission station
wireless time signals has
erected on the prime meridian
Greenwich, and electrically
If
for
been
of
con
nected with a master clock which
Is kept regulated by the transit of
-tars over that merldan and no
other.
Then when the noon signal drops
out of the sky upon the waiting
antennae of a ship in the middle
of the ocean, or upon the impro
vised receiving apparatus of an
explorer In the midst of the
polar snows, or the heart of a
tropical jungle, It will be the
standard noon of the world, and
whoever hears It will be able,
without any preliminary calcula
tion, to read his longitude from
the face of his watch.
A striking example of the sim
plicity of the apparatus required
in order to receive the Eiffel Tower
signals has just come to my atten
tion. A commercial traveller in
eastern France, who has a liking
fur scientific experiments, had oc-
c:> •) to regulate his watch to the
exact he of Paris. He took a
pair of bone isolaters, such as are
employed in setting up an electric
DEATH OF THE YEAR
By LILIAN LAUFERTY.
W HEN the snows grow bold and ’he stars are cold.
And the Winter night-winds prey,
Wheu the lew holds fast and the world is cast
In a mold of white and gray,
■Then the gloaming falls on the sky's soft walls,
And the lights of t;;e dark axe hung,
While the hushed year lies under brooding skies
Where the censer no.on is hung.
Then the silence speaks over plains and peaks,
And the hush of life draws near,
’Till the screaming wail of the wind and hail
§ounus Lid duaLi ^J- Lit* ycXj
bell apparatus, and attached them
to two telegraph poles, at a height
of about six feet from the ground.
Between them he stretched an
electric bell wire to form an an
tenna. An ordinary spade, with
some freshly cleaned wire wound
round the metal and driven deep
into the ground, served for the
“earth.” It only remained to at
tach a pocket telephonic wireless
receiver to the antenna and the
“earth,” and then wait for the sig
nals. They were perceived with
out the slightest difficulty, al
though the distance from Paris
was about 250 miles.
The Invention of the so-called
pocket receivers foretells the time
when not only chronometrlc sig
nals but news of all kinds may be
transmitted and received by elec
tric waves. With such a system
perfected a man at the South Pole
might sit In his fur-lined, wind-
proof tent, while the Antarctic
blizzard raged without, and, press
ing his wireless telephone to his
ear, cheer his loneliness by listen
ing to the voice of the faraway
civilized world, gossiping to him of
its latest amusements.
Expeditions, 800 Miles
Apart, Correspond in
the Antarctic.
Something like that has already
been done in the Antarctic, where
Dr. Mawson's expedition "has been
keeping in communication with
Australia. The Geographical
Society of Victoria recently sent
him a congratulatory dispatch and
received almost immediately a
reply. Two branches of the ex
pedition, although 800 miles apart
have Ojonstantly corresponded with
on a g^nthac through tha ether.
Money In the Bank Is the
Best Gift to a Child
Save Money for Your Little Ones and So'
Teach Them How to Save—It Will!
Put the Boy or Girl Through College
Some Day.
' By DOROTHY DIX
T HE wise and worldly wise
financial editor of this
paper has recently written
an article in which he urged the
giving at Christmas, or at birth
days, of baby bonds, or a share or
two of some good stock in place
of foolish and ephemeral presents
that are worn out, soon broken,
and of which the recipient quickly
tire*.
He pointed ont that a bond, or
some interest-bearing stock, is a
«
perpetual present, for every year
the dividends come Id, thus keep
ing the giver's memory green,‘and
being a constant source of pleas
ure and solace to the recipient.
In particular, the writer called ;
attention to the fact that if parents j
would start, at the time of a boy’s*
birth, to systematically saving up
a little money every week, buying
a hundred dollar bond with it as
soon as they could, and leaving
the interest on this to compound,
almost without knowing it a
fund could be accumulated that
would send the lad through col
lege.
It is a pity that this sagacious
article cannot be printed in type
a foot high, and hung on the walls
of every home in the land.
It is one of the ghastly ironies
of our American family life that,
while we have money enough for
the little things that don’t matter,
we so often have not enough
money for the big things that do
matter.
Enougli Is Wasted on Toys
to Start a Child in
Life Properly.
People in moderate circum
stances cannot afford to send
their boys to college, or to keep
their girls from having to go out
of their homes to work, but they
have wasted enough money on
bicycles, and ball-bearing roller
skates, and expensive mechanical
toys, and over-fine clothes, and the
movies, to have started their chil
dren out in life properly.
Certainly nobody will deny that
thriftlessness is our besetting
national sin. We don’t spend our
money. We throw it away. We
don’t even know what value we
ought to get for It, and as a peo
ple we live on a perpetual finan
cial see-saw, where we are first
up In the world, and then down.
Also as parents we are at once
the most slavishly devoted and
the most cruel and unnatural in
the world.
No children are so spoiled, so
petted and pampered as Ameri
can children, and no other chil
dren among civilized people are
so ruthlessly thrust out into the
world to sink or swim for them
selves, It is no uncommon thing
for an American father to bring
up his sons and daughters as if
they were millionaires; to accus
tom them to every imaginable lux
ury, and then to die, leaving them
without a single cent to live upon,
and no knowledge of how to make
one.
It does not seem to occur to
such parents that their worst
enemy could not be malignant
enough to do their children such
a deadly harm as they are doing
themselves, and that It is nothing
but common fairness and giving
I he children a square deal to
bring them up to know how to
work and save, or else provide
them with an inexhaustible for
tune.
We all know that thrift lg at the
bottom of all the happiness and
success in life. The man or woman
who saves five cents out of ev«ry
dollar will always be independent,
prosperous, and have a respect
able place in society, while those
who spend a hundred and five
cents for every dollar will alwav*
be in debt, be cringing, and bor
rowing, and parasites and dead
beaU in the world. Therefore,
there is nothing more important
than to teach young people in the
formative years of their lives how
to save, when they can establish
the thrift habit as easily as they
can the wasting habit.
Start a Savings Bank Ac
count for Each of
Your Children.
in order to do this no way is
better than to establish a savings
bank account for a child.
Get your next birthday present
to your little girl or boy take this
form.
Let the child have the account
In Its name, go to the bank and
personally deposit Its dollar or
two, and explain to it how this
money will grow and make other
money If it is not spent.
Another advantage of each
child having its own little bank ac
count is that other people will add
to It also. There are lots of us
who are uncles, and amrU, and
godfathers and godmothers, and
friends, who love some little child,
and love to give it presents, yet
who are In a quandary about what
to give at every recurring anni
versary. Most of us feel that it
is nothing short of a crime to
throw money away on a compli
cated mechanical toy, or a Fronoh
doll that costs five or ten, or fif
teen dollars, that will be broken
the next day.
It Will Send Johnnie to
College or Mary
to Europe.
We would Infinitely prefer to
add something to the bank account
that would one day send Johnnie
to oollege, or Mary to Europe, or
give him or her a chance to go
into some little business.
So I add my voice to that of the
financial editor, and entreat every
father and mother, and especially
those in moderate circumstances,
to start a savings bank account, or
postal. savings bank account for
each of their children. You
haven't any idea how much money
children waste until you start
them to saving their pennies and
nickels. The amount in the bank
grows as if by magic.
And the money saved is the
least part of the value. You teach
the child to do without the little
thing wants at the moment for
the big thing that it may have
hereafter.
And you teach it thrift, and that
is the beginning of all prosperity
STARS AND STRIPES
Answers to the question “What
Is Mother?” given by supposedly
feeble-minded schoolchildren of
Nevy York:
She’s what you chop wood for.
She’s what feeds you.
She’s what puts clothes and
shoes on you.
She keeps cars of you.
She’s who’s good to you.
She’s your creator.
She’s what’s dead on to me.
Best composite portrait of. a
mother ever painted.
Welsh tin-plate managers have
booked orders for 40.000 tons of
tin-plate to be delivered in the
United States before June. Doubt
less to can the American tin
plate industry.
• * »
North Dakota swains play po
ker for girl. looser elopes with
her, showing that h-. knows more
about love than cards.
President Wilson having bg^n
married in Georgia, w& wo^ae 1 *
whether army and G*vy oftlcer*
can longer * sing that insulting
song about marching througn It.
• .* *
Denver mothers won’t let their
daughters wear jewelry, paint, or
silk stockings, li? other words,
they want schoolgirls to look like
schoolgirls.
• • *
Mexican revolutionists are said
to be using cannon balls made of
silver. The odds against the ru
mor, however, are more than lo
to 1.
* * *
San Domingo objects to “obser
vation” of its elections. Uer
strange if the Dominicans court-
o ' observation. Few murderers
do.
* * *
The principal effect of the cur
rency bill will be—well, you tea
us then.