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Xtua ATLANTA GEORGIAN.
B1TUBDAX JUHB- 9,
The Atlanta Georgian.
JOHN TEMPLE GRAVES, Edllor.
F. L. SEELY, President.
■ ■ ■ 1 . — /'■ ■■ , j
their blngles, and tbelr bungles. and root' n»l' root'lto the personal dlttruseion of Hoke Smith Called againjtheory of debate with fearlesaneaa and skill. His per-
The sublime idea Is to root! Sink the foolish Ego In I by undivided requests front the audience. Mr Howell gavoj sonalltles were marshaled ably and he put • h,> ™ ee ” 5
your bosoms—"forget It"—be a boy attain—Just once six mlntites by the watch to the strong assertion, without and brilliantly. If they had been new and fres n e
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Unleaa thou find occasion, hold thy tongue;
Thyself or othera eartlest talk may wrong.
—Sir John Denham.
Saturday Evening.
Mme. de Sevtgnc has recorded tbe opinion that "the
world It neither foolish nor unjust.”
A business Institution In New York has started out
on the theory that the world la likewise honest, as a
rule. '
In a more or less retired section of tbe city an en
terprising man has opened up a restaurant where a
\ trlely of food la set out after the fashion of the free
l met counter. There are no waltera whatever, and
thus an Important Item of expense Is saved.
Customers are expected to walk In and help them-
> nlrrs to whatever they want. They are left to their own
honor to say what they have eaten and how much they
A « e. It Is the theory of this unique business man that
tery few people, thus placed on their honor, will tell
a lie or attempt In any way to beat the house, and that
whatever may he lost In Isolated instance* where he Is
swindled will be more than made np by the amount he
saves on tbe oott of waiters.
At Intervals a watch has. In point of fact, been kept
on customer* fo see If there was any effort “to beat tbe
house.”
The detective who did thle work recently gave his
i xperience* to one of the New York papers.
He says that most people are “on the level," to use
l.ls own language, and that the men who try to "do" a
i-lsce of that kind are not frequent. He relates that one
mnn was noticed to come there for his meats for about
a week; and created the Impression that he was not
square.
He was watched. On on* day he ato 10 cents worth
.] ud when he went to the counter be paid 10 cents. Th*
next day he ate 25 cent* worth and paid 5 cents. The
third day he did th* same thing.
On the fourth day, which was Saturday, the detective
made up his mind that If the customer did the same
thing again he would call him down.
Trne to the clock he came, and ato 30 centa worth.
The detective followed him to the counter, and great was
his surprise when the man took out a two-dollar bill
nnd said: "A dollar five out of that, pleat*. I have been
beating the place this week, becauso I was broke, and to
day la pay day, ao I want to aettle."
Thus the confidence! that the eatabllshment repoaed
In mankind, at a general propoaltlon, was vindicated, and
ihey^ probably started Into work on Sunday morning with
n firmer confidence In the ayatom on which they were
doing bualneii.
We aro entirely prepared to believe this atory and to
nreept the moral It teaches.
The trouble Is that the fine sense of honesty become*
atrophied by the frequency and extent of the appeals
made to tbe cupidity and avarice of mankind. No better
Illustration could be given of this than the subtle bribes
offered the employees of the Pennsylvania railroad In the
shape of stock and cash contribution from alleged anony
mous sources.
Of courso these men knew all the time where theao
bonuses were coming from and what they were expected
to do for them. But they deluded themaelves Into believ
ing that tbay were given out of personal regard or as a
part of a general business system. They probably did
not confess even to themselves that It was strictly dis
honest.
By the time they had advanced ao far In their sense
of right and wrong they were of course a long way
from the simple little truth of their childhood that
"It la a aln
To steal a pin."
We prefer to believe that tbe natural predilection of
mankind Is to be honest. They will not swindle a lunch
counter. But It seems ao different when It cornea to tak-
I- ( money from a great corporation.
The upheaval which has come within the past few
months along the line of reform has done much to bring
the public conscience to a realisation of the difference
l- tween right and wrong and It would be made yet more
effective If some of the offenders are mad* to suffer per-
really Instead ot being allowed to turn state's evidence
r: go free after the payment of a nominal fine.
more. Take our word for It, you’ll have a bettor diges
tion. clearer eye, llvp longer, have a cheerier heart, and
n hand more open.
A Home Run.
, r You fellows with liver trouble; you pessimists who
s,through things, and darkly; lo, all you who are sad
snd lonely—we have the remedy.
Place, the ball park—time, + p. m. Go a bit earlier
tle-agh and see the huskies warm up. Know the players.
The Joint Debate.
The people of Georgia expect from The Georgian
nothing lens nor more than the truth about tbe Howell-
flmlth debate.
And this the people shall have In unvarnished and
undiluted form both In the local columns and upon the
editorial page.
Expressed In a sentence, th* debate ended In a
definite and decisive triumph for Hoko Smith. After the
first hour the laurel* of the evening were all at hla
feet. Let ua note the conditions;
The audience was In all probability tbe largest
and most .representative ever addressed under abettor
by political speakers In Georgia. It was an audience
gathered upon equal terms. The occasion waa heralded
widely as a Joint discussion between the two prominent
candidate* for governor. Both sides had equal oppor
tunity for filling the ball. So far aa all reports have
gone there was no effort on either side to pack the
auditorium lu tbe Interest of either candidate. The per
sonnel of the assembly was exceptionally fine and In
vlaw of the Crowding numbers, the order and decorum
was far above the average of political assemblies.
Before this most magnificent Bnd representative au
dience of their home people these two political antagonists
appeared to fight out their differences and measure their
merits In the arena of debate.
In the first five minutes after the entrance of tbe
candidates the volume of applause seemed to be In
favor of Clark Howell. Whether the voices of hla clans
men were heavier, or whether they found their throats
sooner, or whether tbe followers of Hoke Smith were
slower In limbering up their enthusiasm, the Impression
was distinctly left upon the mind of tbe writer that the
primary balance of sound was on Howell’s side.
The basis of applause on both sides was In tbe ser
ried ranks of followers who were ranged behind each
candidate on the stage and in the nearby adjoining
galleries. In front sat the vast body of the audience,
th* quiet thoughtful people, eeemlogly neutral. Impassive
and watching developments—apparently the balance of
power In the debate and In the election. Up to the
close of Hoke Smith’s first speech they made little dem
onstration and gave no tangible sign ot their preference
and sympathy
Hoke Smith’s opening speech was a strong, clear, bold
argument upon the Issue* ot the campaign. It was In
no sense a remarkable speech. Neither In eloquence nor
In logic was It out of the ordinary run of political effort. -Its
powtr was In It* directness, Its definiteness, and Its un
mistakable commitment to positive reforms. Mr. Smith
spoke forty-five of bis sixty minutes ably and exclusively
upon the Issues. He devoted by tbe watch only fifteen
minutes to a discussion of Mr. Howell and bis record.
The Impression made by hla speech waa that a’ great
political campaign was pending In Georgia, that Issues
vital to the people were at stake, and that he htd fixed
and dear cut views upon these Issues and powerful rea
sons for (he faith that was In him. It was meat for
voters to feed upon. It suggested statesmanship. It
implied a grasp of affairs. It promised a reformer In the
Georgia capital, capable toaeonceive and powerful to ex
ecute the people’s will. He not only asserted principles
and proclaimed attitudes, but ho argued, reasonod and
plead In effective advocacy for bis convlcltlone. If not
a great speech It was a strong speech, a vote-winning
speech. It was received with strong approval and ap
plauded wildly by bis cohorts In tbe rear and on the
sides, and moderately by the audlonce In front
But tho mighty waiting mats In the center sat coin-
parcntly reserving Its decision until It had heard the
parently reserving their decision until they hid heard the
other man. Tho mass had not yet committed Itself.
Mr. Howell was received wllth an applause from bis
own Immediate ranks, fully equaling the reception given
to Mr. Smith by hit rear guard. Ho fronted a groat op
portunity. He had much to gain and little to lose In a
contest In which public opinion had already credited his
experienced antagonist with superiority In debate. If
Sir. Howell had made a strong, clear presentation of defi
nite views upon the great and pressing Issues before the
people In this campaign. If he had Illustrated convictions
and the courage of them upon the things that were
moving as realities In the public mind—even If these con
victions had been counter to their own—the people would
have applauded his definiteness and respected his hoaest
opinions.
Mr. Howell mado here the samo fatal mistake which
he has made all through hla canvass of pitching hla cam
paign purely nnd simply upon the Idea ot proving Hoke
Smith to be unworthy ot the place. Tho editor of The
Georgian has warned him of this error a doxen tlmea.
Mr. 8mlth made hla bid for suffrage upon the advocacy
of certain pressing and necessary changes In the con
duct and personnel of the state government Mr. Howell
made hla plea upon the Idea of personal depreciation
of Hoke Smith’s sincerity and consistency. Mr. Howell
spoke by the watch sixty-one minutes without touching
an Issue—except the Issue of ftoke Smith’s political In
tegrity. hla temperance, hla consistency. When the au
dience finally demanded by calls some comment upon
pending Issues, Mr. Howell spoke by the watch seven
minutes upon freight rates without argument and confin
ing himself to the assertion that he had always been ou
the aide of cheaper freight rate*. Then he drifted back
argument, that Mr. Smith’* disfranchisement plan would | audience they
disfranchise thousands of white men. Then he returned
to Hoke Smith’s record and stayed there until his pero
ration.
This Is accurate statement carefully and Judicially
measured, watch In hand, and absolutely without preju
dice.
These are the two plana of political campaign, set side
by side for trial and experiment One man debating strong
ly the economic and racial lames of tbe hour, the
other man discussing chiefly the personal unfitness of
hla antagonist We have never had any doubt for a
moment that the debater of Issues was on stronger and
more.hopeful ground, and we have said so.
If Mr. Howell Is not In accord with Mr. Smith’s
views on railroads he has powerful ground for argument
on that aide. Charles Pendleton, of the Macon Tele
graph has made that fact dangerously clear to tbe Atlanta
Journal In these later days.
But we lay down here the proposition' as a fact
and a philosophy that It a man gets on tbe people’s side
of a public question and advocates It powerfully and con
sistently you may abuse him till doomsday and convict
him of a dozen Inconsistencies, but you can’t shake tbe
faith of tbe people In Uie fact that he is right now, and
they are going to stand by him.
If there Is any winning strength In Hoke Smith's
campaign It la due to the fact that he has convinced the
people that they need negro disfranchisement and a home
regulation of freight rates, and that he Is the man to get
It for them. Jf there Is any weakness In Mr. Howell's
campaign It Is dun to the fact that he has devoted more
time to discrediting Hoke Smith than he has to making
clear his own convictions and Intentions on these great
questions.
The two plans'of campaign—tbe two theories of can
didacy had at least a fair experiment last night.
At tho conclusion of Mr. Howell’s speech his partisan
rear guard rose at him In a volume of sound that was
equal to anything that had gone betare.jw
But the great central audience were yet unrespon
sive. They gave small external evidence of their Impress
ions. That mighty mass had heard Hoke Smith In com
paratively unresponsive silence. They had now heard
Clark Howell In the same unmoved temper of attention.
They ha(l listened to both men now and were ready at
last to express an opinion. The great body which bad
preserved almost judicial calm waa now ready to return
a Judicial decision. %
It came with a whirlwind of approval when Hoke
Smith rose for hla concluding speech. A* he rose the
whole center of the house seemed to rise with him. It
was an ovation of swinging hands and waving hand
kerchiefs and ringing cheers—a wonderful and Inspiring
scene. - •
Retard this tribunal at least, and upon this presenta
tion tho campaign of Issues had triumphed over the cam
paign of personal objection. The decision waa clear,
unmistakable and emphatic.
Hoke Smith’s concluding speech waa a total departure
from hla first It was personal, masterful and thrilling.
It rang with confidence, It sparkled with satire. It pulsed
with dramatic defiance. He towered In his superb per
sonality and swept Into further and fuller enthusiasm an
audience which had already committed Itself to his cause.
The conditions were unequal for Clark Howell. The
editor and the trained debater wore separated by temper
amental differences as vast aa the disparity In their
physical proportions. Physical differences are of amall
account Aleck Stephens made that plain with Toombs
and Hill. It-waa the temperament that told. The mili
tant, Intense and forceful mind of' conviction against
the light lovable.and forceful spirit of concession and
peace. Mr. Howell’i vole* In It* range and compass
placed him also at great disadvantage with hit robust
and sonorous rival.
It cannot be denied that Mr. Howell executed his
ould have made
nsation and might
have turned the scale In his favor. Hut the fact that
they had all been rehashed In the prints and replied to In
kind made them stale, flat and unprofitable In a skirmish
so near to the end of the war.
Summed up In a nutshell here are the equations:
A robust personality, a strong temperament, a
forceful conviction, against a likeable personality, a
lighter temperament and Indefinite convictions.
Issues against assertions.
Policies against personalities.
Is It any wonder that In a political pitched battle tho
victory went to the stronger temper, the Impressive con
viction and the definite Issue? *
3
rate Lease,I Wire.
York. June 9.—Here are some of
the visitors In New York today-
r J - °' Karn " , ’ a ' Orps.
IN PARIS.
Special to The Georgian.
Paris. June 9.—A. Sandheimee ..s
Mr. and Mrs. t Epstein, or Savanna!?
registered nt the nrtlee of th. «e..r" nah -
regljuered at thi office of the Euro,^
edition of The .New York Herald tods "
The Joys of Summer.
All the delights of summer do not consist merely in
sitting upon the sunlit sands, swept by ocean breezes and
allowing the complexion to assume a nut-brown Out,
Nor yet do they consist wholly In sltUng under the In
fluence of the big round 'moon-ami allowing the soul to
grow full of syllabub ana sentiment.
These have their Joys, but there Is a certain pleas
ure In the marvelous stories which come to light at this
seductive season of the year, and the present year ap
pears to have been particularly fruitful.
Iu our own column* the other day It was related that-
a Certain Nimrod, one of the mightiest hunters In our
midst, testified that he had a gun which would shoot so
far that be had to put salt on his bullets to keep the
game from spoiling before he could get to' It Thl* waz ,
a truly remarkable gun—or rifle, as the case may have
been—and must have delighted the spirit of that veracious
chronicler, Baron Munchausen. '
But the Incoming steamers* which are arriving at the
various porta of the country are bringing In some stories
—not all of them on the log book—which are even more
astounding. These Jolly skippers would be under suspi
cion of avenging themselves tar not seeing the sea ser
pent thus far this year It. It were not for the fact that we.
all know the iren of that walk—or roll—of life to be
above exaggeration, not to say misrepresentation.
The other day, when the Carpathla came Into port,
there were numbers of people on board who were ready
to swear that the ship ran Into a school, or seminary, of
whales; that one of these leviathans of the deep swam
directly In the 'pathway of the onruahlng steamer which.-,
cut him In two.
A storm waa raging at the time, but ao soon as the
catastrophe occurred the whale oil'diffused Itself over the
spumy, splashing waves to such an exterft that Imme
diately thoy became aa calm as the aea of Galilee and
tbe vessel thenceforward rode on In tranquillity and
■afety.
To our mind this seemed quite a remarkable occur
rence and was worthy of.tbe prominence given It by
the leading paper* of the country.
But Glamls and thane of Cawdor! tbe greatest Is be
hind!
On tbe same day the American ship John Briggs put
In at Seattle after a voyage of 167 day* In the south seas.
The crew declared, between the staves of their dlpsy
chanty, that during their passage through the Pacific the
vessel began to steer wildly, and on Investigation It wab
found that the green plno planking which had been put
on astern, had sprouted pine branches, sonic ot them
ten feet long, and these had thrown the lumber ship
off her course. “All hands went overside and sawed off
the growth,” said the oldest sailor. "Then the old
hooker found her course.”
Marvelous almost past belief! And yot the sailors
were there and they ought to know.
What with blackberries and watermelons ripe and the
annual crop of sea stories keeping somewhat above the
average, there Is every Indication that we will have a
very pleasant summer.
Tins DATE IN HISTORY.
JUNE 9.
1626—MInde.i luk’n by Tilly
1660—Marriage of Louts XIV with ths
Infaiitn.
1792—John Howard Payrc. author . t
"Hon-* HWt-.-I Homy born D',1
April 10, 1151,
1600—ltatti- of Moatihoil-v ii a i v
1821—Prrn iHlon-U government
In Orocci*.
1825—Pauline Ponaptirt* died
IMS—Eugene Hale, flitted Stake
ator front Maine, bori "
1851—Vigilance committee ertarl/ed
In .v-.i l'-aii-itoi. * n,i * -
->f Afglmnlt'an
11c3—Dost M;n.;ir.ti
Med
1870—Charles Dickens, novella, a le4
Horn February 7, 1812.
1883—Tim Ke|ly, Phenlx Park murl
derer, hanged In Dublin
.... d61P1 '' 1,an ned In Dnblln
US—President Consoles, of Paraguay
deposed and banished. B T ‘
1904—Levi Z. Letter died. Born No.
vember 2, 1U4.
WILL D. UPSHAW AT BLUE
MOUNTAIN.
Confidence In Judge Hines.
Augusta, Re, June I. 1908.
To the Editor of The Georgian:
I am convinced that Judge Hlnee le
a man of loo much common sense and
purity to allow hlmaelf to be used
by a set of political knaves I have read
with some surprise the sinister cir
cular to tlw Populists to nominate
Judge Hines for governor, promising
the support of the Republican and de
generated Democrats. This scheme
must have been hatched either by a
fool or knave, for It la perfectly plain
It waa done to defeat Hoke Smith, and
to emulate the negro In politics; but
it will fait.
Yours truly, •
JAMES BARRETT.
From Rev. C. B. Wilmer.
To tho Editor of The Georgian:
I ant compelled to be out of tbe city
on 8unday next, June 10, and the Rev.
Mr. J. J. Lanier, of Mllledgevllle. Ga.,
will fill the pulpit of St. Luke's, both
morning nnd evening.
Mr. I .aider le not only a valued per
sonal friend of mine, but one of the
most thoughtful men In the Episcopal
church. He Is the author of a three-
volume book which Is not as welt
known ns It ought to be. "Kinship of.
Uod and Man." In the Introduction,
which is supplied by Judge Logan E.
Bleckley, that distinguished Jurist pays
the author the following tribute: “Of
nil the religious discourses I ever
listened to. they made the deepest Im
pression upon me. I am not theologian
enough to. pronounce upon their con
formity to scientific theology, but they
seem to harmonise, certainly tn moat
mon sense and sound logic. They ap
pear calculated to afford very strong
assistance In solving some of the grave
difficulties that beset the close and
candid thinker In hla speculation on
religious toplca.”
I trust that Mr. Lanier will forgive
me for writing thus of him tn the pa
pers and I ask my Atlanta friends,
whether Episcopalian or non-Eptaco-
paltan, to take advantage of th* oppor
tunity afforded by Mr. Lanier's visit to
our city. C. B. WILMER.
Atlanta, Oa., June 7, 1*96.
“Why Eat Msat at All?”
To the Editor of The Georgtai,.
Since one la not certain of obtaining
untainted meat, the question arises—
why eat meat at all? la It neces-
rary?
Man Is not naturally carnivorous,
and his animal ffesh-entlng habit Is a
beast Inheritance from the lower orders
of creation.
But, says the meat enter, I must
have beef, mutton or ham to keep up
my strength. Fudge! Meat Is but a
stimulant, my friend, nnd you mistake
stimulation for nutrition. Beans and
peas contain -twice as much nutrlclous
sustenance as beefsteak, nnd there Is
more carbonaceous and nitrogenous
nutrition In barley, corn and rye meal,
coarse-ground wheat, bananas, al
monds, chestnuts and walnuts than
there Is In nny kind of meats. Grains
and fruits in season, together with
eggs nnd milk, supply all that man’s
nature needs, and lime Is coming when
the meat eater will be looked upon oa
a sort of uncivilised cannibal. There
la no doubt about that.
In the hot weather, meat overheat-1
the system, and la positively Injurious.
Cases of sunstroke nnd heat apoplexy
'are far more numerous. among flesh-
eater* than vegetarians.
Other conditions equal, the vegeta
rian has greater powers or endurance
than the meat-eater. This has been
frequently demonstrated during the
last few years, and I am at all times
willing to demonstrate It personally to
any skeptic.
A simple vegetarian diet Induces
habits of sobriety, economy and self-
control; In fact, the vegetarian is a
more wholesome, cleaner nnd sweeter
K rson altogether than the meat-eater,
sides being healthier and a atrongr
to tape worm.
By A. H. Ellett.
'"pm greatert good a hero does man-
kind Is Just to have lived a hero ”
I think Christopher Columbus was a
great man. Not for salting seventy
days toward the sunset. • He was a
great man for fighting eighteen years
of Ignorance, envy and superstition to
the end of getting ready to sail.
Huber Is n great naturalist by rea
son of the work he has done. But
Francois Huber Is a great man by
reason of the odds against which he
achieved this work.
I was swept by the deluge of a
mighty symphony, and gladly paid
homage to the marvelous musician
who wrote It. But when I saw them
take him by the arm and turn his
eyei to the applauding multitude, end
realised that tho hand of Silence had
smitten hla hearing dead, I bowed my
head ejid paid obeisance to the great
ness of a man. v
Do you bid me name the greatest
speech that Alexander H. Stephens
ever mnde? This is It: Forty years
of silent endurance under the merciless
rod of bodily pain.
The other day. Will D. Upshaw
came to Blue Mountain and drew an
other bow of promise across life's sky
—the promise that no deluge of diffi
culty need engulf a hurfian soul. He re
wrote for us across the sky of Ilfs
this mighty truth: The Immortal spir
it is superior to Its crumbling tene
ment.
Do you think he did It In a long
faced, lonesome, lugubrious way? Ho
did not. Did you think there was In
his manner or words or tones a bid
for your pity? There was not.
Do you know what men and women
and boys and girls and little children
need? It Is Inspiration. That Is what
It le—Inspiration. You give us inspira
tion, and we will do the rest. You set
before us the ladders, and we will
climb until our heartstrings snap.
That is what Will D. Upshaw does—
gives us Inspiration. The boy who
leaves the hall at the dose of one
of his lectures believes he can do
greater things than he- thought «o
coming In. The girl goes away with s
higher and a holler purpose In her
heart.
We are glad "Brother Willie” cams
here. We are glad to have In us ths
abiding knowledge that while away
from here he Is blessing other lives.
For the sunshine he brought us,
For the courage he taught us,
For the manifold measure of plsasure
he wrought us.
We love Brother Willie.
And cordially call him—we maidens
and men—
To come with hla sunshine and see
us again.
TO THE GLOOM8TER8.
doom, gloom, gloom!
(live as th* tales of the tomb:
Rio n# the stories of tumor nud mneer.
Tales of the problems with never su so
ewer:
Tales of the vandal.
(loeetp nnd eeandal.
Tales of diseases nnd stories of Iml.l.le-
flreodlng dlsnster nnd direful troubles
From the mountain’s grassy side
A guiltless feast 1 bring—
A scrip with herbs and fruits supplied
And water from the spring.
Yours truly,
BRUCE MACLEOD,
Physlculturlst.
School of Arms, 166 Peachtree Street.
World-Weary.
a servant.
The steel
Tell him
Tell us tho tales of weak souls In damns-
Tnl<»* mi Of folk on tho brink of starvation,
(ilv* tM tb«» novel whom- motive I* ni*M.
Mnnlor nml nrwon and rnthloM rapin';
Tell of dead bttblef nnd
mother*.
Sister* cone wrong nnd
brothers. ... „
Giro n* the dram* of pnltHc corrupt!
heart stricken
Jail full «l
Innocence grilled In votenslr■ erunilon.
Tell ns the tale of Ikudsehuh » J 1 ". 1
Fill up your pages with frceh-mlnted rrlui*.
Bunco nnd swindle*, ami coward sssaulwra
Forgers, shoplifters nnd high-priced default
Bilkers' anil welehers and libellers vile.
Torn Into royalties nil of yonr lillo
(live un oitr heroiuen nil meretricious.
Down with the virtuous, up with
virions! ,
DM ell your visions he rheumy amnirr^m
1'nragrnphM brimming with eat
Sorrow, mlifortnne.
i,l cark.
Itnlu nml faithlessness everywhere-*
Wherever ye go
F.ro(lc neurotics will cry with » rn "'
lie's brought twenty sorrows nh-o
'JOHN KENDRICK BASISS.
SENATOQ
ffoRMAN
DEAD
PICTORIAL ROUND-UP OF ANOTHER WEEK BY CARTOONIST BREWERTON
3 STATES
DECLARE For.
Bryan in |C)oq