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Y T i SU C‘ AY 5
The President’s Action Will = =
Rejoice All True Americans
~ The President has taken hold of the Mexican prob
lem with the strong hand.
General Funston has been ordered to get Villa. The
country can rest quite easy over the outcome. Funston
WILL get Villa,
It is The Georgian's most sincere pleasure to con
gratulate the President, cordially and heartily, upon his
firm and proper attitude.
We had feared that the country might be treated
to another dose of watchful waiting, and we knew that
the country was sick of that sort of thing. But the Pres
. i%nt has dispelled that fear. He has acted exactly as we
% an American President should have acted.
m}mm‘g all the newspapers in this country, none will
st.nd ifii‘,flr Wilson more loyally and more gladly than
4;;11 The Gt&#n. in that he has decided to uphold the
honor of the nltlon and to avenge the insults and out
rages inflicted upon Americans by these Mexican bandits.
For the masses of the people in Mexico we have only
the utmost sympathy. The poor creatures have them
selves-been the victims of the same rapacious. and un
scrupulous villaine who have outraged and murdered
THE ATLANTA GEORGIAN
our citizens. We are certain that they will in their hearts
welcome the sight of American troops, coming not to
conquer and enslave them, but to release them from the
terror in %ich they have lived for months and years.
Mr. Wilson has placed himself upon the right track.
We feel sure that he will not turn bt;ck. The nation will
wish him to go forward.
As for our soldiers, we do not doubt for one moment
that they will give the same good account of themselves
which American soldiers have ALWAYS given. -
All they want is to be brought face to face with these
murderers. Then they will do the rest.
Again we congratulate and thank the President. It
certainly will rejoice the whole country to know that the
Government has decided to deal with these Mexican ban
dits with the iron hand.
Now they will learn that there is such a thing as
pressing the forbearance of a great and powerful people
beyond the limits of endurance. :
When our soldiers are through with these villains,
we think it will be some time before another lot of
brigands will murder Americads. .
The Important Thing
of the Day
By John Brisben Walker
NE can keep busy every
O minute of the day and yet
make 2 complete failure of
the day's work; most often it is
the difficult thing to do that is the
most important thing.
Therefors, before the real work
of the day begins it is necessary,
If you are to organize your day,
that you should carefully ponder
over what is to be done and pick
out, from its details, the most
important things.
The important thing is the first
thing to be done,
Do the first thing first.
Having the {mportant thing
done in the early morning hours,
while you are fresh and strong
and courageous and clear-headed,
because courage and clear-head
edness are actually products of
ample eleep and the taking, of
plenty of oxygen into your lungs,
the rest of the day can be devot
ed to the less arduous tasks,
Do yeu think that you can ar
range the details of yvour day’'s
work without putting them on pa
per? Try first the purely mental
process. You think you have
them clearly arranged?
Now try putting them on paper.
THE GREAT DETECTORS.
The great detectors of imperfect
thinking and poor planning are a
pen and a plece of paper. You
begin to put down your carefully
thought-out plans., It is not easy
to do-~why? Because your think-
Ing is badly done.
You can not state on paper
ideas that you have never
thought. The instant you attempt
1o put down an incompliete chain
of reasoning you detect the fact
that some links of that chain are
missing, and you must set to work
to uuom{ the missing links,
Therefore, it is the nm:::: in
the art of organization to | to
put your plans on paper. Only on
paper gan you detect the weak
ness of your reasoning. And so
You turn to your writing table.
What do you find there? If you
are the average boy or girl, or
;vm man or wmuom;bkh
ttered, your pen your
‘dnl;t.h.w from evaporation and
If you acubt how mugl:‘ the
average man or woman to
learn in the W
~and pens; tools that should be of
the best are often of the most in
ferior quality; penholders that do
not move smoothly over the pa
per, inkwells that are open to
the air and are uncleaned, ink
that is heavy with dust.
Yet student or clerk, business
man or hounqwife. you can afford
to study out this little bit of or
ganization and provide the best.
You wonder why vour time is
being taken up with such minute
things as inkwells and the posi
tion of the clothse you have taken
off the night before when | am
* undertaking to write of the
sclence of organization.
1t is because, if you are to learn
organization, you must begin at
the beginning. You can not spring
high up onto the ladder which
reaches up into the realms of big
organizatisn. You must climb
round by round.
If yoljare incapable of reason
: out and organizing the as.
fvrn of your every-day life, he
sure that your talents will never
be sought for in the larger affairs
of business.
WHAT IT MEANS.
Organization means the reason
ing out of every detall of life or of
the business upon which we are
engaged. It means applying econ
omy of motion, perfection of de
tall and thoroughness of method
t:/u work which we are given
to’ do.
Organization is the sclence of
bringing every operation of life
within the rule of securing the
largest amount of valuable results
with the least waste of hnm:,
energy. The simplest as well
the most complex affalre of life
require organization If we are to
secure these results. “Fvery hour
of the day, every operation of life
requires its special work of ore
ganization,
Every action in the home or in
bu“l{ rl mm"h&t mw,:hn ‘l‘:
a .clearly -out g
must be organized (o secure the
highest nf-m.
The first step looking toward
- the organization of your daily life
ix to determine:
What you are compelled to do,
What Q wish to do, and
What ought to do, and why,
THE HOME PAPER
Chlorine in Peace and
War
By Woods Hutchinson, M. D.
The World’s Best Known Writer on Medical Subjects,
| EN are not the only things
that lead a double life.
All our insect friends, for
instance, lead triple existences,
each stage of which is completely
hidden from the other.
That fellow creature of the cho
rus girl, the lobster, passes
through a dozen different moults
~ before he reaches the Great White
: Way, while that distant poor rel
ative of ours, the angle worm, can
be eut with the scissors into as
many sections as he is inches
long and grow a new head and
tail ‘? each one.
Bt the most astounding mas
querading, lin the most different
and contradictory of guises upon
the world stage, is that of those
innocent and passionless creatures
~-the chemical elements, In one
guise a deadly poison, in the other
a life-giving food; In one sort of
company a soggy mush, in another
A dangerous high explosive,
One great primitive element, ni
trogen, plays the leading role in
guano at one end of its repertoire
and gunpowder at the other, and
can pass itself off as loaves or as
Iyddite with equal facility.
WHAT HYDROGEN CAN DO,
Another element, hydrogen, ona
of the Big Four--carbon, hydro
g€en, oxygen, nitrogen—which
make and control life and all its
processes, i« the cause of all the
wetness in the world through its
two-to-one combination with oxy
gen to form water.
While in another case the same
two identical actors, supported by
the famous star, ecalclum, pro
duce the hottest fire and most
brilliant illumination known-—the
oxy-hydrogen Ncwr.pc. or fa
millar limelight. Whatever may
be the fortune of others, these gm
fi:thm are always in the lifme
t
In recent years our attention
has been nmufl{'mm to
another Jekyll-and-Hyde a
the elements—the wldumdm::!
wmmm. chiorine. This
in vartons efit&a‘-
water, and as it goes everywhere
where sea water goes, which
means over three-fourths of the
surface of the whole globe, while
most of the rocks of the other or
dry land, one-fourth, have been
lald down under sea water, it is
tolerably übiquitous, or, in the
vernacular, “numerous,”
As we originally grew up and
Hved for millions of years in sea
Wwater, we have never yet been
able to get completely soaked outr
and “freshened up” yet, and chlo
rine in a considerable amount still
Is found in our bodies, Jarticularly
in the Nuide.
We are all old saits, whethey
we follow the sea for a living or
- not. Whether this is simply a
~ bad old deep sea or swbmarine
~ habit which we can not At ance
~ #hake off, like the atavisms to
. shark and sea serpent “form” of
the past few monthe, or whethes
chilorine has become a vital ne
cessity would be'hard to say.
A LIFE NECESSITY,
Certainly its combinatior. with
sodium, chloride of sodium, the
common salt of our tables and our
pickling vats, has become u neces .
sity of life. There is still some
mystery about it, because whils
common salt is found in practie
cally every xmng animal tissue
and most vegeta le, it does not
enter into intimate combination
with the life-stuff or protoplasm,
but only seems to serve with wa
ter as wh water bath or warm
inland in which #t can swim
and feed and CAPTY out its activi
tes. It seems to werve as a kind
:mnory fluid for outr. life dac;
and the momen
the '"%' is cut off onr
hn.w!t‘hh-:" ory llu onoce. B
t our . long lana
and air bmhfi.:‘mu, wa are
still & walking aquarium, travedy
ing marine mmxflu miniatyy,
oceans on legs, skin-locked
Hving leather botties of warm
wuetr in human m The
ment our supply ' water
:l.t runs short we bagin to foune