Newspaper Page Text
EDITORIAL PAGE
- THE ATLANTA GEORGIAN
b Published by THE GEORGIAN COMPANY
At 30 East Alabama Street, Atlanta, Ga.
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Leak Scandal Shows Every
* >
- Evidence of Being a Low
¢.. - .
Political Trick to Dis
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credit President Wilson’s
- Peace Efforts.
This so-called ‘‘leak scandal’’ at Washington amounts so
far to just this: Representative Wood, an Indiana politician with
a reputation for using bulldozing tactics in law and politics, has a |
letter which he says was written to him by a man named A.
Curtis.
Wood does not know who A. Curtis is, or whether there is
such a man, nor does anybody else. ’
In the letter, the unknown Curtis accuses several men, by |
name, of having imparted or received advance information that |
the President had dispatched his peace note to tHe European |
belligerents, wit Which information they raided the stock mar. ,
ket and made millions. j
Three men specifically accused by the anonymous letter |
writer are Mr. Tumulty, secretary to the President; Mr. Otto H, |
Kahn, the banker, and Bernard Baruch. {
Oonfronted by the indignant denials of Mr. Tumulty and |
Mr. Kahn, the best that Mr. Wood was able to say was that he |
had never accused Mr. Tumulty or Mr. Kahn or anybody else of |
having had a part in using advance information as to the Presi. '
dent’s note—that he had only said that he had this information ~|
in a letter, written by the unknown Curtis.
We think a blind man could see through this whole pro- |
cedure. |
It is nothing but a very stupid and clumsy attempt to throw l
mud upon the President’s effort to promote peace. ’
Consider the facts: t
Representative Wood is a lawyer, with a great reputation ‘
for shrewdness and technical skill, especially in criminal practice. |
He must have had many cases in which the result hung upon the |
authenticity of a letter and the identity of a writer, All his train. !
ing and habit would naturally make him cautious and prone to |
insist upon identity, ‘
Yet he trustingly accepts at its face value a letter written
by somebody he never heard of and accusing highly respectable
- men of turpitude and base conduct, and, without a particle of in
- vestigation, without even using a two-cent stamp to satisfy him- |
- self that there was such a person as the letter writer, he brings l
in a resolution that is an implied accusation, and then spreads
Mrupocublemen'sumuonmmordbymomofthh
anonymous and self-discredited letter.
And what is the first thing trumpeted through the public
press?
Why, that one of these men contributed $35,000 to the Pres
* f{dent’s campaign fund.
And what next?
Why, that one of these men is the President'’s private secre
tary.
And what is the impression that goes abroad?
Why, that Mr. Tumulty let Mr. Baruch into the secret of the
President’s note in advance, so that Mr. Baruch might skin the
stock market.
And what was the inference plainly intended to follow in
the public mind?
Why, that the President was secretly repaying campaign
/ debts by permitting his peivate secretary to help Mr. Baruch ;
make a Wall Street killing. |
And notice the TIME when this was done.
It was done at the exact time when Senator Lodge was try.
ing to rally enough support in the Senate to discredit the Presi.
dent’s note.
And WHO was foremost in helping Mr. Wood to bring his
innuendos and his anonymous letter to public attention?
Why, Senator Lodge's son-in-law and another bitter assail
ant of the President’s peace efforts—little Fussy Gussy Gard.
ner.
. mdyonmrmanmnttogothurlnthmufinpod
more nicely than do all these circumstances?
" There are always shrewd guéssers making ‘‘killings’’ in
Wall Street. Gamblers are always guessing.
“ And that is exactly what happened this time.
A crowd of gamblers who had been winning and overbetting
~ §ot cleaned out by another set of gamblers. That's all that hap
pened in Wall Street—and a good thing it was.
Mwnwmtnmjmwmeoflhhlain‘mblh‘
outfit that started to get revenge upon the President, not because
. there WAS a leak but because there was NOT a leak.
Doesn't any man of ordinary sense know that if the big
- gamblers in Wall Street had got advance information of the
Mut’spmnmmnwomnnbumnmm
~ sny of the pack?
The reason they are squealing and trying to throw mud on
fildflnhmunndondmt%nmnhmm’m
taken wholly by surprise; that no news leaked out to them in ad.
. vance; that their spies and correspondents were not able to post
them in time to clean up the market.
. We have not a bit of faith in the accusations and charges
and innuendoes of Wood and Gardner, and nobody is silly enough
- %o believe an anonymous letter writer who has either forged a
name or is ashamed to come forward and answer to his own.
We trust the President, at whom this mean and vidou,’.
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no uneasiness.
" The osths of & million of such individuals would not shake,
~_for an instant, the absolute confidence in the President’s recti.
umm«mmumwmmum.
o o The Congress will have universal approval if it an end
i : mdu farce and gets down to the mfl:.u.. of
THE ATLANTA GEORGIAN
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How Do They Do It?
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THE HOME PAPER
’ . 1
'Men’s Clubs vs. Nagging
e '
¢ & Ives ®®
; AR L
Husbands Ought Not to Leave Wives Alone—Wiyeg
, Ought to Make Home Happy.
RE nagging wives to blame
A for ‘men’s clubs? Or are
men’s clubs to blame for
nagging wives? They are argu
ing about it in Kansas. ;
You can’'t pick up a Kansas
newspaper without seeing a let
ter from “Pro Bono Publico,”
“Veritas” or “Spartan Mother” or
“Roman Father” about it
The Roman fathers all seem to
take the view that the only rea
son a man goes to a man’s club is
to get away from some woman.
' They say that women are small
minded, petty and nagging.
They don’'t want a man to
smoke in his own house or take
a drink at his own sideboard.
They won’t let him read his own
paper in peace, and the only way
he can ever get a chande to find
out who's going to be elected for
supervisor, without being inter
rupted a hundred t{imes to hear
about how much ice the cook
wastes and what a perfectly ri
diculous creature the woman next
door looks in her brand-new
dress is to grab his hat and flee
to the club.
The Spartan mothers don’t see
the thing in that light “a-tall.”
They declare that there wouldn't
be any nagging women if men
would only behave themselves
and stay away from their clubs.
Women would be “good fel
lows,” all right, if they didn't
have to hear so many songs-about
good 'fellows between 2 and 3
o'clock in the fmorning, when the
singer is past getting any kind
of a tune whatsoever,
A man will do anything on
earth and say he did it because
his wife nagged him. He'll em
bezzle the money of the firemen's
fund; he'll set his house on fire
and try to collect the insurance;
he'll elope with the hired girl;
\ he’ll go and join some kind of a
queer brotherhood and vow never
to shave until women have been
put in their proper places—and
he’ll do it all because his wife
“nagged him.”
THE OTHER SIDE.
Ten chances to one, his wife
began nagging him when he be
gan doing things that he ought to
be nagged about.
One thing, though, the be
nagged man never does—he never
stops doing the thing that his
wife is nagging him about.
Why shouldn’t a woman nag a
man when little Mary can’t afford
& new dress to graduate In and
Tom, Jr., has to stay out of the
baseball club because he can't
raise the money for a suit, and
then mother finds the bar checks
from the club in husband's pock
et and they add up to more than
enough for that dress and that
suit, and ice and gas for a month
besides?
The wonder is not that women
nag so much, but that they nag
so little. If men had half the
I That Diet Experimentj;
J By DAMON RUNYON.
OME excitement has been
S created in New York over
the fact that twelve recruit
policemen aro about to undertake
to live for three weeks at a cost
of 25 cents, the fourth part of a
dollar, per day per man.
They are calling it an experi
ment, but it is not an experiment
at all. It is an absolute cinch,
Any reader who will carefully fol
low out our‘instructions can prove
it to the world, and become a
most unique character, ,'r
HOW IT CAN BE DONE,
We have prepared, and append
herewith, a serles of daily me
nus, the cost of which is two
bits, or less, per dlem, but which
contain sufficient nourishment to
sustain life in any healthy person
to the very end—if properly ap
plied.
These menus were arranged
after consultation with some of
the most famous chefs in New
York, none of whom was unable
fully to comprehend why a man
with but 25 cents per day to live
on should want to Uve,
MONDAY MENU,
Breakfast—Prunes, & cents,
Dinner—Four glasses beer, 20
cends.
Few men can lift, let alone eat,
more than § cents’ worth of
prunes, even under the prevalling
prices, and they are very nourishe
ing.
aft will be noted that luncheon
is eliminated. No man with m
two-bits is entitled to even
iߢ ", ' o, o
the free feed which is pmfldog'l::
every lawful beer ’cnof or em
porium, including ty of crack
ers, which are proue to swell un
By WINIF
RED BLACK.
grievances of women, theyd be
ten times worse naggers.
That's the other side of the
story. Which side do you taket
I'm for 'em both.
4 I don’t blame a man for golng
to the clyb, and I don't blams a
° woman for nagging him ftor go
ing.
If I had a husband who spgni
more of his evenings at tn,
club than he did at home Ig
do one of several things. Either
I'd curl up in the hammock, tyrp
on the porch light, get & book
and a box of chocolates and have
a lovely read, and every once in
a while I'd take a long breath and
be thankful that I' was marres
to a clubman who didn’t expect
me to sit up and make thinga
pleasant for him every evening of
the world——
Or I might be the sort of wom
an who would sit in the hammock
without the porch light and with
out the book, but I'd have the
chocolates all right, and there'd
be & man on the steps at my feet
—somebody with a ukulele prob
ably, who'd always know enough
to stop playing and go home just
before time for husband to come
home from his club, _
Or I'd be so dead in love with
my husband that I wouldn't go
out on the porch at all, but lock
myself up in my room and cry
till I was a perfect fright—and
when he came home I'd nag him.
I wouldn't do any of thess
things because I thought they
were the right and proper things
to do, or because I was a noble,
" high-minded, self-sacrificing
creature. I'd do them becauses |
was a human being and apt to
behave as such—being married 1o
another human being who did his
very best not to act llke an an
gel. '
What a lot of nonsense it al
ways brings to the surface when
we try to pretend that men and
women are, or ought to be, ex
actly alike in every way.
“OUGHT” VERSUS “|B.”
Men go to ‘clubs ani womer
nag. Men perhaps pught not to
80 to clubs and leave their wives
alone. Women ought not to nag
their husbands and make their
homes a place of misery, but how
seldom “"ought” means “is.” Did
you ever notice that?
Ir I were & man I'd be a club
man—there’s no use trying to
deny it. I never can see how a
really dyed-in-the-wool clubman
can ever get up the courage t
g 0 home at all. Those big, cool
airy rooms, the quiet servants
the perfect service, the newspa
pers in orderly plles, the good
food, the good fellowship, th
absolute freedom from responsi
bllity—how do they ever drag
themselves away at all?
Why fret so much about clubs
sisters? If we had really
sense, we'd have some more of
the same kind of clubs ourselves
der the Influence of hops and are
most filing.
TUESDAY MENU.
Breakfast—Prumes, 5 cents
~ Dinner—One order of tripr. 10
cents.
| Statisties show that 10 cen's
. worth of tripe is enough for A 7
man to eat at & single sitting and
~ this leaves a nickel, which may b®
w “‘W in a moving picture
~ #how or put out at interest. '
& well-known fact it 04
lively entertainment is almost 48
i sustaining as food—to some 100
ple.
WEDNESDAY MENU.
Breakfast—One leathor Vlls
cents.
Dinner is eliminated o 7 :rLa
~ day, as by tightening tho :":’* .
. patient will not require any 1%
whatever. This has Leen demon
strated .’ poldiers, X "f'rl""
novelists and the like wien 84
ing In waste places.
THURSDAY MENU.
Breakfost—One egg, <5 "
Dinner {s here aliminatod 4085
m.-lg’ of the egs *b .:‘:
sufficlent to sustain oo " TOO
the rest of the day. If 70 58 0
be secured at that price #SO
tute beans. Twenty-f' g
worth of \beans for -
should last & man from 10 ¢
tery to Behring Btraits
FRIDAY MENU.
Dreakfaat—One scction o 177
25 oents.
| s tha rope
| The client should uso 07 :’Q
| hang the most cO%
l "Vzli‘t m:fl‘: avoid an? fur
. ther expense and merial AT
. ment from the conskiemtion o
| mntl-u- the high oßt