Newspaper Page Text
4
Adjutant General Points Out Ad
. vantages to Youths and the
Nation by Plan.
Advantages of compulsory military
fraining were pointed out yesterday
by Adjutant General! J. Van Holt Nash,
of the National Guard of Georgia,
who is aiding the school authorities
of Atlanta and Americus in plans to
introduce military training among the
male High School pupils. In com
menting on the compulsory system
under governmental supervision, Gen
eral Nash said
“This service would practically
eliminate illiteracy, tor all who be
came soldiers would be taught to read
and write while they were undergoing
training. Respect for superiors, obe
dience to orders, promptness of ac
tion, alertness of mind, knowledge of
personal hygiene, self-restraint, disg
cipline, agility of body, composure of
bearing, moral uprightness, observ
ance of law and a dozen or so other
important attributes of modern Amer
fean life are the outcome of military
training, even though it consist of but
Iwo or three years with the colors.
Time Far From Lost.
“Sueh time is never lost. The man
who masters a soldier's qualities, even
" though he be delaved a few vears in
starting, will quickly overtake and
surpass the man who has no such
sobering and uplifting influence.
“There 18 no better training for the
. ¥outh of our land. Every physically
able young man should be compelled
to take a course in military life, for
" there Ik no telling when every avail
_ able soldier will be needed in the de
fense of our liberty and the sanctity
of our Institutions, The value of such
training is being shown each day on
i the battle flelds of Furope. There the
¢ eountries at war are being forced to
* drain their reserves of men to keep up
" the fearful combat for their national
~ existence
*1 shall do all in my power to in
" troduce military training among the
schools of Georgin. The Government
. will co-operate in this, for laws bear
ing on the subject already have been
sed by Congress. Any school ca
::: corps that is properly enrolled
. Will be armed by the United States
rand a yearly supply of ammunition
- for target practice will be supplied.
E Will Provide Officers.
g* **There is no effort too great to car-
S ¥y on this vital work and once the
S young men are tralned one of the
| greatest ilmpediments to the complete
;ncoou of the National Guard will
" Bave been removed They will be the
" eorps from which the State will re
- eruit its ofMicers and soldiers.”
© Like most American military offi
r’.. General Nash does not belleve
4 the militaristic policy that has
2 ide the army a nationa! fetish in
%" pany, but he does strongly be-
Meve in preparedness for defense, In
‘this country these advocates hold that
; army should be the means to an
and of vast importance to our every
“day lives of rnco. not an end te the
of making and waging war for
Lonquest or greed or personal ambi
ion. It is for this reason that Gen-
Nash is backing the movement,
lod In Americus and Atlanta, to
1 the schools organize cadet corps
i the instruction of capable oM.
.
egro Thief Shot
- As He Flees Crowd
3
. Doe McKinney, a negro, was shot in
e leg lant night as he fled before a
P d that pursued when he Is al
- to have attempted to steal a
ficket of lard from the New South
£ . At Glenn and Murphy streets
E I 8 not known who fired the shot
LJ. L. Skelton, a shipping clerk at
@ bakery, sald he had found the lard
conc d under a window and was in
At when the negro came. He ran
he negro who hurled bricks at
# followers until some unidentified
in the crowd fired
.
¥oman Wills $l5O to
- Atlanta Orphanage
15; i —————
. The Hebrew Orphanage of Atlanta
Bequeathed $l5O by Mrs. Lena A
» a resident of ;(ll'hmu"d, Va
died recently in that city
% of the bequest was recsived
A telegram 1o the Bunday American
night
‘Mr. Went-And-Cut-It
; ’ T ‘0
—Here’s Mr. ‘Gels
-3
" The New Plan Corn Cure That's
" as Bure as the Rising Sun
= e meat . - - ™
EAn the cort pleed 1 v sa
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ERorns love « b .
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I Lawrence & Co. Chionso In
Mohr Tragedy Contains a Great Lesson
Let All Read It, Says Ella Wheeler Wilcox
Dr. Mohr, Himself a Bad Man,l
Tainted All With Whom He
Came in Contact.
By ELLA WHEELER WILCOX.
Encircling the wseas, a ship fre
quently passes through a belt of loz
out of which it emerges into clear
seas and bright sunlight. Our earth
is making a circuitous journey towarl
a higher cycle; and just now it is
passing through a zone of hate.
Passengers and memmbers of crews
have been known to become hysterical
and lose their reason when the shin
was befogged for a long period of
time. They did not realize that the
Captain knew his course and womd
conduct the ship to safety. So many
men and women have lost their poise
here in the hate zone, not knowing
that the world I 8 coming out into the
sunlight of the Golden Age after a lit
tle more time hag passed.
A shocking story was related by an
evening paper a few days ago of a
beautiful b-year-old Belgian refugee,
lovable and attractive, and high'y
temperamental, who enacted for tha
ilntervlewer a drama of hate and mur
der concelved by her own childish
brain. She called to the imaginary
‘Kalspr and his army to come through
the window and accept her hospitali
ty. then she arranged her doll dighes
and cups and saucers and poured im
aginary coffee for her German vls!-'
tors,
She diverted the Kaiser's attention
by the showing of a post card, while
she poured poison into his coffee, and
afterward watched with great dellgat
the dying agonies of her victims.
Seeds of Hate and Murder,
The Interviewer was impressed with
the dramatic instincts of the little tor;
but almost any thinking tndividua' |
must be horrified at the thought of lha‘
'frluhtful seeds of hate and murder
which had been planted in this child
ish mind, to grow into God only knows
what harvests of crime later on
Murder and suicide In all eras o -
cur; but ever since the awful lay
‘when a wild army scourged a peaceful
country and started its war of terror.
ism, Hell has seemed to let loose its
legions of hate upon the earth, and
murder and sulclde have increased
alarmingly.
The value of human life has seemed
to drop far below par in the estimation
of the mMasses. It 1§ Impossible to read,
talk and think continually of the hor
rors and brutalities of war witnout
brutalizing the mind to a greater or
less degree, 3
Unconsclously to themselves, no
doubt, the hate vibrations In the air
had their effect upon the mind of al:
those invovied in the Mohr tragedy.
Seed thrives in the soil prepared for
it; and the Mohr household and all
its employees and assoclates, til'ad
furrows and fertilized them for tne
¢rowt't‘l (;‘f a harvest ol‘.h-‘te'.‘
ohr a Ba an.
Dr. Mohrmw' was a bad mar.
He do;nde’ ”‘- profession and de
utfroyed his 3 ‘soul :36 the ‘m'mu
of weak women, marri ana single,
by helping We&‘t‘cm the cares and
responsibilities of motherhood, and
this is the unpardonable sin; for the
Lord of Life made sex that birih
might come; made sex and its keen,
compelling desire to fashlon bodles
whereln souls might go from lower
planes to higher until the end is
reached, which is Beginning
~ Woman is the only female creature
of earth who is guilty of this terrinle
crime; and when man aids or anets
her in any way he puts himself in
league with devils, far below the plane
of beasts. .
The murderous work of Dr. Mobr
put him in perfect accord with the
hate vibrations from the war zone.
Lust, greed, death were in his atmo~-
phere. He degraded all women with
whom he assoclated; he destroyved
their ideals: he killed thelr aspira
tions; he lowered their standards.
Tainted by the Man.
Both of the two women who stand
before the world to-day with blasted
reputations--the mistress who will
carry the physieal and the moral
blight of her association to the grave
~the wife, now accused of murder,
would unquestionably have romllxpd
decent and inoffensive citizens, had
they never assoclated with Dr. Moh»,
The colored men who had accused of
participating 'n the crime, had they
been employed by a God-fearing and
humanity-loving family, might have
had their thoughts and impulses -li
rected upward instead of downward.
They were iike leaves on the edge of
An abyss —swirled into the maelstrom
by a sudden gust of wind,
There are, in this land to-day, scores
~—~ves, alas, hundred-—of young women
who are tempted to form alliances
with unworthy men because these
men can offer them money, pleas
ure and excitement, motor cars, fine
apparel and what they term a good
time,
Let them read the report of (he
Mohr trial from beginning to end Le.
fore they take the fatal step. Let themn
fully understand what a common-lawn
marriage entalls, and the certaln ro.
wults which follow (n its wake-—~disil
luslonment, discord, jealousy, hatred
and temptations to crime.
Lot every woman, married or single,
who is tempted to aMliate herse!f
professionally or romantically, with a
physiclan who pursues the crimina:
course, which gave Dr Mohr his
means of support, pause and rea'ize
the enormity the sin she is contem
piating. For the day may come—
nav, will come-~when they must stand
bhefore the Revealing Angels
"y s
Dr. May to Exhibit
Belgian Souvenirs
In the lobby of the Lyric Theater
ali this week an interesting collection
of souvenirs made by Belgian children
®will be exhibited by Dr. F. E. May,
hairman of the Beiglan Rellef Fund,
The souvenirs were sent as gifts to
American children as reminders of
the gifta sent to the little Belgians
from America
The souvenirs will be shown from
2 1o € o'clock In the afterncons and in
the evenings. No admission fee will
;bo charged.
Suffrage Petitions
[ Will Be Distributed
The Atlanta Ruffrage League will
meel Monfday afternoon at 3 o'clock
8t the Carnegle Library, at which
Ume petitions will be distribyted
among members with instructions to
ket signers for the plea to Councl! to
lln- women the right to vole in city
cimciions,
Mre A G Helmer, president of the
league. urges all members to attend
Monday s meeting
! . §
‘The Revealing Angels
’
; By ELLA WHEELER WILCOX ;
N A P eO NP PP P PP,
UDDENLY and without warning they came-—-
S The Revealing Angels came.
Suddenly and simultaneously, through city streets,
Through quiet lanes and country roads they walked.
They walked, crying: “God has sent us to find
The vilest sinners of earth.
We are to bring them before Him, before the Lord of Life.”
- - -
THBH( volees were like bugles:
And then all war, all strife
And all the nolses of the world grew still ;
And no one talked
And no one tolled, but many strove to flee away.
IRRobbers and thieves, and those sunk in drunkenness and crime,
Men and women of evil repute,
- - -
A.\'l) mothers with fatherless children in their arms, all strove to hide.
But the Revealing Angels passed them by,
Saying: “Not you, not you.
Another day, when we shall come again
Unto the haunts of men
Then we will eall your names:
But God has asked us first to bring to Him
Those guilty of greater shames
Than lust or theft, or drunkenness, or vice, -
Yea, greater than murder done in passion,
Or self-destruction done in dark despair,
Now in His Holy Name we call:
‘Come one aud all,
Come forth, reveal your faces.'”
- b -
']‘HICN through the awful silence of the world,
Where noise had ceased, they came-
The sinful hosts.
They came from lowly and from 16fty places,
Some poorly clad, but many clothed like queens ;
They came from scenes or revel and from toll :
From haunts of sin, from palaces, from homes,
From boudoirs, and from churches.
They came like ghosts-
The vast brigades of women who had slain.
Their helpless unborn children. With them trailed
Lovers and husbands who had said, “Do this,”
And those who helped for hire.
They stood before the Angels—before the Revealing Angels they stood,
And they heard the Angels say:
And all the Hstening world heard the Angels say :
“These are the vilest sinners of all;
For the Lord of Life made sex that birth might come; made sex and its
keen compelling desire ; ;
To fashion bodies wherein souls might go
From lower planes to higher,
Until the end is reached (which is Beginning).
They have stolen the costly pleasures ot the senses
And refused to pay God's price.
They have come together, these men and these women,
As male and female they nave come together
In the great creative act, .
. - -
UT“EY have invited souls and then flung them out into space
They have made a jest of God's design.
All other sins look white beside this sinning;
All other sins may be condoned, forgiven ;
All other sinners may be cleansed and shriven ;
Not these, not these,
Pass on and meet God's eyes,”
- - -
THE vast brigade moved forward and behind them walked the Angels,
Walked the sorrowful Revealing Angels,
Ga. Manufacturers
Coming to Atlanta
First Annual Convention To Be Held
February 10—Freight Bureau
To Be Considered.
Members of the Georgla Manufac
turers’ Association and manufactur
ers all over the State Saturday re
celved invitations to attend their first
annual convention, to be held in the
Atlanta Chamber of Commerce Build
ing on February 10.
The convention will consider the ¢s
tablishment of a general freight and
trafMic bureau to deal with all rate and
Ty RR SO NSO SRR IR
IR SEESTTRESSN—
ADVERTISEMENT
Hot Water Each Morning .
Puts Roses in Your Cheeks
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5 i & . L ‘ : ,(, i 22 L
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5 3 s o v -
J Wi et
il P ; WS RA N - LI EN
To look one's best and feel one's
best s to enjoy an inside bath each
morning to flush from the system the
previous day's waste, sour fermenta
tions and polsonous toxine before it is
absorbed Into the blood. Just as coal,
when it burns, leaves behind a cer
tain amount of Incombustible mate
rial In the form of ashes, so the food
and drink taken sach day leave in the
alimentary organs a certaln amount
of indigeatible material, which, if not
eliminated. form toxins and polsons
which are then sucked into the blood
through the very ducts which are in
tended to suck in only nourishment to
sustain the hody 4
If you want to see the glow of
healthy bloom in your cheeks, to see
your skin get clearer and clearer,
you are told to drink every morning,
upon arising. A glass of hot water
with & teaspoonful of limestone phos.
phate in It which s & harmiess
means of washing the waste material
and toxine from the stomach, liver.
kidneyvs and bowels. then cleansing,
swestening and vuritying the entire
HEARST'S SUNDAY AMERICAN, ATLANTA, GA., SUNDAY, JANUARY 30, 1916
T ———————————— A ————————————————tam Dl A ANRI AN R ¢ O UNUAIVE
traffic matters and with an expert at
its head. Voecational education n
Georgia schools also will be taken up
and addresses will be made by a num
ber of prominent men.
Morning and afternoon sesstons will
be held, and among the speakers will
be Governor Harris, Frederick B. Gor
don, H, A. Dean, Willilam W. Horne,
Thomas K. Glenn, Preston 8. Ark
wright, W. B, Baker, Walter H.
Clarke, of Tennessee, and H. . Mei
kleham.
OfMicers and directors will be elected.
| TO STUDY CHILDREN. |
CHICAGO, Jan. 29— Mentally deficient
children in the city schools will be in
tvntlnu’a by ctud:nu of Rush Medical
College If a request to the Board of Fd
ucation made by Dr. Josephine E. Young
is granted
alimentary tract, before putting more
food intd the stomach.
Girls and p\:u'on with )olauow skins,
liver spots, ples or pallid complex
fon, also those who wake up with a
Coated tongue, bad taste, nasty
breath, others who are bothered with
‘Theadaches, biltous spells. acid stom
ach or constipation should begin this
phosphated hot-water drinking and
Are assured of very pronounced re.
sults In one or two weeks,
A quarter pound of limestone phos
phate costs very littie at the drug
store, but is sufficient to demonstrate
that jJust as soap and hot water
cleanses, purifies and freshens the
skin on the outside, 3o hot water and
limestone :hmmmn At on the inside
Organs, ‘e must always consider
that internal sanitation s vastly
more imporiant than outside clean!|-
ness, because the skin pores do not
absord mpurities into the blood,
while the bowel pores do
Women who desire (o enhance the
beauty of their complexion should Just
try this for & week and notice resuits.
~AAvertisement
ADVERTISEMENT
Accused Woman Stirred When
- State Threatens to Question
| Legitimacy of Offspring.
| e
\ By SOPHIE TREADWELL,
Staff Correspondent of International
News Service.
’ PROVIDENCE, R. I, Jan. 29.—Mrs,
Mohr came confidently to the stand
}this morning,
. Her main cross-examination had
'bi-vn finished yesterday Just a few
more questions and answers in ‘‘redi
rect” and her big ordeal would be
over. But within three minutes after
she again faced with pale, steely eyes
'3l) éxpectant courtroomm she was
threatened with the disclosure of per
haps the deepest buried of all of the
life secrets she has struggled so bit
{terly to cover up.
| Her counsel, Arthur (Cushing, had
|:-!!t~mpml to introduce into evidence
| the birth certificates of her two chil
| iren, Charles and Virginia.
. ""Why litter up the record with all
his?” demanded Attorney General
| Rice. “The State has made no at
| tempt to prove the children illegiti
' mate.”
| “But we are taking no chance of the
| State’s using such an insinuation in
lits argument to the jury!” snapped
| John J. Fitzgerald, for Mrs. Mohr.
| “All righty,” retorted Rice. *“lf they
‘[vu! this in evidence then we can go
the limit in proving whose children
. they really were.”
} And with this threat hanging in the
'air the subject was closed
; Mrs. Mohr had already testified
| that both the babies had been taken
]h\ the doctor himself to the cathe
' dral for baptism
| From the moment of this menace
against her children, Mrs. Mohr's at
titude changed. Her pale, flaccid face
reddened. Her answers were sharply
given, Where before she had been
careful to answer as shortly and in
definitely as she could now she
fought back, amplifying her answers
with bitter self-justification.
When the Attorney General asked
;?mr if all his life her husband had not
| had “mud slung at him.” she retorted
. “I made a man of him. Mr Rice
| The doctor said so himself hundreds
)f times. T made a man of him.”
She clung to this—as she has ¢ lung
to her plea, “I loved him.’
The picture of her husband that
for the last two days she has been
painstakingly painting before a
crowded courtroom--the picture of a
drunkard, dope flend, wife-beater and
liar—she calmly finished by writing
the caption, “I made a man of him."”
| HAT PIN IN DOG'S STOMACH
‘ PITTSBURG, Jar 20 A hatpin 7
inches long was removed from the stom
| ach of Kink, a valuable Boston terrier
belonging to Miss Alice Stewart, of Wil
‘klnshuvu, by a surgeor The dog had
| been {ll for several days when the « per
ation was decided or The pin lay
llr»-s‘lhwl\- in the dog's stomach
f’ ‘ «w/_;m‘?;_’_\‘ ‘si T s?;‘
Y- 2%, e R ’ A
A\ e — A
\ §\\\a *_—P‘;\; o 1 éf? = *\\\‘
S
AL
,‘. P \\; ‘ = ¥ K
T T T
The Man Who Represents You!
T HE clean-cut salesman who carries your mes
sage to your prospective customer—who
represents your firm—who tells your selling
story, and makes your SALE. You are mighty
particular about him, are you not?
He must be a man of good character and good
address. He must convey the impression of a
reliable and honest and worth-while firm. He
must put your merchandise before the prospect in
the most attractive manner possible.
If you are so particular about your salesmen,
how about your SILENT SALESMEN—YOUR
PRINTED MATTER?
Webb & Vary Co. ,Seod Atlanta
Always Within Speaking Distance on Both Phones,
Clarke is Manager
Hayden Expects Enlarged Field of
Work With Reorganization
of Office.
Edward Young Clarke, who hasi
been first vice president of the Geor-]
gia Chamber of Commerce, yesterday
became secretary-manager of the or
ganization. Enlargement of the scope
of work of the chamber caused the
following other changes in manage
ment to be announced:
T. C. Erwin, vice president of the
Third National Bank, treasurer; J. G.
Weatherly, secretary Brunswick
Board of Trade, field secretary; Eu
gene Southwick, special representa
tive, pending the maturing of plans |
for the publication of an, ofiiciall
monthly magazine of the organization
to be known as ‘“The Developer,” of |
which he will be business manager;
Mrs., Gertrude V. Kelley, office secre.
tary; Verne H. Barber, manager of
the motion picture; M. Leak, manager
of the Georgia exhibit cars, and Louis
N. Geldert, compiler of “Facts About
Georgia.”
| Charles J. Haden, the president,
said yesterday that under the new
’plan the chamber was facing the best
[year's work in its history.
\ A —————— .
) . .
Rev.C.o.Jones Victim
‘ .
0f Malice, Says §
i allce, Nays nNon
. N. T. Jones, the son of the Rev. .
10‘ Jones, gave out a statement last
night declaring false the reports that
hls father, who is the pastor of Trin
ity Methodist Church, was a leader in
the quarrel of neighbors living in the
vicinity of Highland and Adair ave
nues over a street light.
“My father is the victim of mali
cious persecution, but he has not
taken any part in the controversy,” he
said. “Certain persons in that neighe
borhood had a flaming arc light
placed in front of our home that was
80 bright and made such a moise my
' mother could not sleep. I, represent
iing my mother, petitioned for the in
junction to remove the light. The
! Georgia Railwav and Power Company,
and not my father, painted one side
’or the arc globe to keep its rays out
'or our home.”
.
Cheshire, Just Out,
|
\ o
~ Lauds Grady Staff
\
‘ Numerous friends of L. (. Cheshire,
‘whn for 40 years has handled tickets
at every worth-while spectacle pro
duced in Atlanta, were welcoming
him gladly on Saturday. He had Jjust
left Grady Hospital, where he spent
nearly three weeks recovering from
an operation.
“I can’t say too much in praise of
my treatment at the hospital,” Mr.
Cheshire told all his friends. . “They
treated me fine, and everyone, from
Dr. W. B. Summerall down, is de
serving of the highest praise and re
gard. They all should have commen
dation instead of knocks, for they are
Mumx a splendid work of great mag-
Ix-xvrmr-. and they all follow a very sat
isfactory system.”
gkt {
Commissioners Consider Passmgi
Rule to Compel Fulton Teach
ers to Move From City.
It's likely to be a game of tit for
tat in this movement that has been
inaugurated by the city to compel|
city school teachers, now living out
side of the city limits, to move inside.
County School Commissioners, it
became known Saturday, have taken
cognizance of the activities,of the city
and are planning to strike back—a
little stroke of retaliation as it were
—by forcing all county school teach
ers now living In the cily to move
outside.
And the county officials are sure |
the city would in this way lose mnxul
city taxes than they would gain fru:nl
the incoming teachers, as they de
clared there are more county teachers
with homes in the city than city
teachers living outside. The county
doesn’t relish at all the idea of the
city taking away any of its residents,
and thereby perhaps affecting” the
population of some of the suburbs.
One of the school commissioners
remarked:
“It's a poor rule that won't work
both ways.”
Some of the school commissioners,
it was reported, already have con
ferred on the proposed campaign of
retaliation, and expressed themselves
in positive terms. If the city car
ries out its program, the matter proh
ably will be taken up at the next
regular meeting of the county school
board.
2 Join Suit Agai
t Agalnst
Negro odd Fellows'
Another move was made S7llllr(’£\)'l
in Superior Court in the negro Odd
Fellows’ row when E. i. Collier, A.
Graves and others asked that they be
made parties to the pending litiga
tion and that the court take charge
of all of the assets in the local of
fices Judge W. D. Ellis signed a
temporary order and set the hearing
for February 5.
It was pointed out that there now sis
no district grand lodge in Georgia,
this branch having been abolished re
cently by the Grand United Order of
Odd Yellows of America in Philadel
phia.
DR. MELVILLE T. JOHNSON
Surgery and Chronic Diseases of Men, Women and Children.
Office Hours from 9 a. m. to 6 p. m.; Sunday from 9 a. m. to
2:30 p. m.
428 Austell Bldg., Atlanta, Ga.
EACH and every Circular, Booklet, Catalog or
Folder you send out is a Silent Salesman.
Even your Letterhead is a criterion of the char
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Convict Prefers Jail
To Being a Witne
Alabama Prisoner Refuses to Tes.
tify in Georgia, Though Requi
sition Is Granted.
Acting on his constitutional right,
J. B. Williams, a convict, has declined
to leave an Alabama prison to revisit
Georgia and testify against the twao
Chances, Minter Kennedy and Ike
Carter, a negro, who will be placed
on trial at Leesburg to-morrow
morning for alleged conspiracy to kill
A. D. Oliver, a banker, who was shot
to death some months ago.
Frank A. Hooper, of Atlanta, who is
assisting Solicitor General J. R. Wil
liams in the prosecution, said he be
lieved that the defense has sent )xh«-
convict a message and “put him wise”
to the stand he should take. At any
rate, a telegram reached Governor
Harris yesterday morning stating
that Williams had refused to come
to Lee County after Governor Charles
Henderson had granted Governor
Harris’ request that he be allowed to
do so.
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