The Atlanta Georgian. (Atlanta, GA.) 1906-1907, September 19, 1906, Image 6

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x'Hli ATLANTA GEORGIAN. wriiNrsnv:. •nmiiiSr.n ». The Atlanta Georgian. JOHN TEMPLE GRAVES, Editor. F. L. SEELY, President. Subscription Rates: One. Year .......A $4.50 Six Months....... 2.50 Three Months 1.25 By Carrier, per week 10c Published Every Afternoon Except Sundsy by THE GEORGIAN CO. at 25 W. Alabama Street, Atlanta; Ga. fiatint as matter April V. ISOS, at the Potrtoffiee St Atlanta, Gs.. uniter art of rooar.ee of March L 1879. f Subscribers falling to racslva THE GEORGIAN promptly and ragularly, and raadara who can not purchaaa tha papar where THE GEORGIAN should ba on sala, ara raquaatad to communieata with tha Circulation Managar without delay, and tha com- plaint will receive prompt attention. Talaphonaa: Boll 4927 Main; Atlanta 4401. BMITII k THOMPSON. ADVERTISING RKrilKHENTA- TIVE8 FOR TERRITORY OUTSIDE OF GEORGIA. Eastern Offices: Western Offices: I’otter Bldg., New York. Tribune Rhls., Ctalce*o. Tha Georgian calls the attention of Its multitude of sorrespondants to these facts; That all communications siust ba signed. No anonymous communication will be printed. No manuscripts will be returned unlesa stamps irs Inclosed for the purpose. Our correspondents are jrgently requested to abbreviate their letters as much is possible. A half a column will ba read, whereas a ’ull column will be passed over by the majority of ■cadere. ‘‘Where the Georgian Stands.” It would he Interesting to know Just whore The Georgian stands politically now. Is It In or out?-— Dublin Dispatch. It Is not now, never hRB been and never will bo a natter of very great Importance to The Georgian how It stands with any particular faction of the Democratic party. We are Democrata from tradition and inheritance, and Democrata by conviction and the record—Democrat* of the real type, because we believe In real Democratic principles, and are not held In the spurious loyalty of spoils—Democrats who hold the creeds and mission of the great party above the schemes of faction and the Mlflsh designs of ambitious men. But If our good frlond of The Dispatch really wishes to know how we stand In the general alignment after the battle of the primaries, wo will answer him frankly that he must hare read very little or read very carelessly If he does not know that we stand resolutely and definitely with Hoke Smith upon the platform that carried him so triumphantly Into tho governor's chair. How could wo stand otherwise? Mr. Smith's plat- form was our platform, his public principles wero ours. May we say further—that we were building tho chief plank of tho next governor's platform before he got on It himself. Years before Mr. Smith or the strongest of his lieutenants had become convicted ui>on tho disfranchise ment Idea the editor of Tho Georgian was preparing' the minds of the people, North antf South, for the Inevitable coming of tho Idea. Upon Chautauqua plntforms, before state legislatures, upon the rostrums of great universities, and upon a thousand lecture platforms at home and abroad, ho had preached this doctrine of the eternal In equality of the races and tho Impossibility of ruling them under the same laws and according them an equal part In this great government. And these spe/ches, attacked In , pulpits, controverted In assemblies, discussed In forums, and aisalled or approved In a thousand newspapers, North and South, have done their full and overflowing aharo In creating tho public sentiment which carried Hoke Smith an a tidal wave to victory and opportunity. Upon the other plank of his platform wo were among the flrst to Join with the Atlanta Freight Bureau and our •■teemed contemporary of The Journal In fighting for lower freight rates, for the curtailment of the lobby and for the equal taxing of corporations. And even sftcr the railroads hsd endeavored to throttle tho Independence of this pen by treacherous purchase of tho columns that It filled, we defied the power that held, or thought It held us, and without waiting or caring to nek If It consented we advocated these ssme principles within the very walls that monopoly had captured and consecrated to cor porate uses In time of need. During the campaign Just closed we have advocated unceasingly upon tho hustings, and In our columns, tho tame principles which budded tho Hoke Smith platform. We have never varied In the fidelity of our championship Of these things for which Mr. Smith was fighting upon the stump. If we were not so constant and so persistent as was one of our contemporaries, It was because the ceaseless vigor of that other contemporary's reiteration, made appropriate a quieter and let* partisan advocacy upon our part. It In the campaign we did not place Mr. Smith's name at our masthead and thunder a personal advocacy of his claims. It was because of personal relations and com* plications which rendered It difficult to do that. But It ever a paper made clear Its position upon the Issues pre sented In a gubernatorial campaign we think The Geor- clan illd so. And there are thousandsswho believe that the more tranquil and non-partisan force of thla advocacy of the platform of a man rather than the man himself, did Its great and elfectlvc share In the sweep of the Au gust primaries. If The Dispatch wishes to know further how we stand now, we will aay that with all our ransomed powers we are going to stand by Hoke Smith and his administration tn bringing to pass the things for hirh he and The Geor- glan fought during the past fifteen months. We are going to give him full loyal and unqualified support In these measures, and we are going to hold up the hands and strengthen the efforts and advance the In fluence and repute of the new governor to tho full meas- Oie of our capacity, while he stands steadfast to the principles which have placed him In the executive chair of the greatest and most Influential state of the South. For the rest, ws have no favors to ask of Mr. Smith, no hope of his rewards and no fear of bis punishments, if he shall see fit to deal In either punishment, or reward. We stand for Democracy In Its genuine form. We atand for whlta supremacy by the beat posit ble means to secure It. We stand for the regulation of the railroads along line* of perfect justice to the people and to the corpor ations. And we stand first of all for the people who need us most. Does The Dublin Dispatch know our position now? What We Have Accomplished for Our. Women. If any man thinks that The Georgian has been simply firing in the air in its recent crusade against the idle and vicious negro, and in its appeals to the leaders of the race to thunder in diapason tones against the criminals and the crimes which have «o greatly aroused the South, let him look at the record of achievement within the past few weeks, The Georgian, in full recognition of the casual but capable co-operation of the other two Atlanta dailies, may justly lay claim to the dominant part in this public awakening. Day in and day out we have preached the doctrine that these heinous crimes against society and against the supremacy of the Anglo-Saxon race must absolutely cease. The offenses have grown so grave and so frequent that we are face to face with one of the great crises in our social history. Tho verdict is that something must and shall be done to put an end to this reign of terror and lawlessness. And to accomplish this imperative end we have counseled and demanded that the leaders of the negro race must take up the cause with tongue and pen—from pulpit nnd from rostrum must proclaim to their people that this saturnalia of lust and murder and arson must end. Wo have called upon them to dwell leas upon the irregularity of summa ry justice and more upon the crimos which pro voke it—to unite heart and soul and mind with their white friends and fellow citizens to stamp out tho evil at the very fountain head. It is in itself a high tribute to the probity and patriotism and wisdom of many of these leaders of the negro race that they have risen manfully to this appeal of Tho Georgian and in no uncertain terms arc declaring that the crimes which produce lynching must cease—that the purlieus of vice shall be stamped out and that the better class of negroes must stand together for tho general good that all real friends of peace and order and higher morals may not bo overwhelmed in a common ruin. We find II. H. Proctor, one of the ablest and strongest of the colored ministers of Atlanta and the South, preaching this doctrine from his pulpit and appearing before council to urge that body to co-operate with him nnd with the better cleifient of his race to suppress the hives of iniquity where these crimes are generated by idleness and de- bnuchcry. lie makes the perfectly fair request that new laws, if necessary, be enacted to bring about a more wholesome condition of things, and the whole city applauds his wisdom and practical fore sight. Ho has written himself down as one of the sin cere friends of the white race and of his own—a real friend of peace and order and higher morals in our civic life. And EdiV>r Davis, of The Atlanta Independent —he, too, is using his great nnd far-reaching in fluence through hia paper to bring about a hotter condition of things. No one asks him to cease de ploring the resort to lynch law, but ho has seen that the need of the hour is to denounce in stento rian tones the crimo which lies at tho root of the evil rather than the evil itself and in this he is ren dering yeoman service. He is opening the eyes of his rnce to tho course which they must pursue if they are to escape the wrath to come and live in pence and amity with the only people who are real ly their friends. Commissioner Stinson, of the Morris Brown college, who is recognized everywhere ns one of the ablest nml most sincere men of his race in the South or the North—he, too, has heartily joined forces with The Georgian and is preaching the same vig orous doctrine. His own people hear him gladly, for they recognize in him the genuine leader that he is. Thomas T. Fortune, of The New York Age, whose fame is national, hss taken the same line and is doing good work in the cause. I.ast but fnr from least, Booker Washington himself has declared that the policy contended for by The Georgian has shown him the way to a new and more effectual aervice, and ns a consequence he is advocating the coune suggested first by this pajier. The Georgian claims no credit for having tak en the initiative in this matter. While we were all flqundcring in the dark for some practicable rem edy for the tremendous evil which environed the Saxon women, it occurred to us to sohnd the slogan that the leaders of the negro race must do this work. Until it was done—until this wearing rep etition of denunciation of lynching, which we all deplored, gave place to an even more vigorous de nunciation of the underlying crime, and the negroes of the South were brought to a realization of their offenses, we advocated, and we would repeat the advocacy if need be—that the white people of the South withdraw their support, from the negroes. We announced a policy that until the negro editors nnd teachers and preachers all over this Southland took up the cry, the white people should refuse to help them build their churches and their schools, should withhold those manifold acts of charity and assistance for which they look instinctively to the white race. It would not be long before they felt the pressure and would be brought to a realizing sense of the enormity of the crimes which have been a veritable epidemic in this community and in this state. We prefer to believe that the leaders to whom we have referred are brought to their present course by the noblest sentiments—that it is not the threat of ostracism, but a sincere desire, once their minds snd consciences were aroused, to bring about relief from the body of this death. But whatever may have been the moving cause we find them co-operating heart and soul with The Georgian and denouncing death and damnation to the rapist and the murderer, rather than dwelling academically upon the evils of lynch law. This crusade has, among other things, brought about on investigation of the conditions in Decatur street, where very nurseries of crime exist at ev ery step. A delegation from council visited that section on a tour of inspection and found 2,45$ idle vagrants in the saloons of that quarter. It is said that had it not become noised abroad that the in vestigating committee was coming it would have been an easy matter to find at least one thousand more, loafing and drinking and incubating crime at the very time when the crops are rotting in the fields because there are not laborers enough to har vest them. On its very face it betrays a situation which is well-nigh intolerable. We feel sure that since the enormity of the condition has been made apparent by facts nnd fig- urea, something will be done along the line suggest ed by Proctor, and these haunts of vice will be cleared out. The time for sermonizing has passed, except as to solemn warnings on the part of the negro teachers and preachers and editors, thundering against idleness and vice and all forms of crime. The time has arrived for resolute and vigorous ac tion. To clean up Decatur street and put the va grants to work iq n step in the right direction, but the jiropaganda must not slop Lucie. Tho ugiii must be kept up until every such den has been elim inated, until the negro shall be taught that ven geance swift and sure will be his portion from his own rnce as well as ours, if he commits a crime, and that this reign of terror is not to be repeated so long as the blood runs red in Anglo-Saxon veins. The Georgian appreciates the splendid co-op eration that has been accorded this paper in its ef forts to solve the problem. We feel that the peo ple of the whole South recognize and appreciate it, and likewise do they appreciate the part the wise and pat.iotie leaders i the negro race have taken in holding up our hands. The negro leaders have done nothing in twen ty years that commends them so much to Southern white men, as the answer to this appeal. A Suggestion to Peachtree Pavers. One of the foremost citizens of Atlanta has called our attention to the fact that In the repairing of Peachtree street all pipe laying and underground work should be done In advance to avoid tearing up tho pavement as has been done In the past. The suggestion Is timely and sensible. Most of us kqpw the Injury that has been done to the asphalt pav ing by having holes cut in It by gas, electric, sewer and other workmen. It has been asked further why It Is not practicable to use vitrified brick pavement laid on a concreate bed, as Is so successfully uced In such cltlos as Cleveland, Detroit and other cities. Some of the best examples of this class of pavement are found In Texas. There Is no reason why we ennnot enjoy as perfect streets as other cities have, and we ara sure that if the street car tracks are solidly laid In concrete So there will be no breaking of the pavement next to the rails, and suitable brick pavement laid, we will he rid of the disgraceful aspect presented by our beautiful thorough fare. ! GOSSIP James B. Hammond, the wealthy manufacturer of New York, who has for many years suffered from neural gia, Is having constructed for him a portable house, which he will carry with him wherever he goes, and with It ap- paratns whereby he will supply the house with the quail- ty of air necessary to alleviate the torturing pangs of hlg disease. Growth and Progress of the New South Under thla head will appear from time to time Information Illustration the remurkible development of the “—“* J * c *~ lug Attention. ■oath which deserves something .more than peas* A Lecture Course For the Farmer. It Is a recognised fact that the railroads are among the most useful agencies In the upbuilding of the South, and an Illustration In point Is about to take place In Mississippi. For several years the railroads of the North have run what they call "seed nnd soli specials,” having on board a number ot specialists qualified to lecture on the subject of diversified Industries. They have been of Incalculable benefit to the people of that section, and hove done a great deal to stimulate agriculture. And now for the first time the Illinois Central will run one of these farmers' special trains south of the Ohio river. As the farming in the South differ* In many respects from that In the North and West, these talks will be on very different lines. This special train will start from Hernando, Miss., on October 2, and tbs trip will terminate ten days later at Memphis. The course will be South by way of Jackson, through Mississippi and Louisiana, to a point near New Orleans, and then north over the Yasoo and Mississippi valley line. It Is said that lectures will be delivered In 97 stations, and that In some places halls will be rented tor the purpose. The best of special talent will be employed for this purpose. Among the lecturers will be Professor J. C. Hardy, president of the Mississippi Agricultural and Mechanical College; Professor W. L. Hutchinson, di rector of the Mississippi agricultural experiment station; Walter Clark, pres ident of the Cotton Orowers' Association; H. E. Blakeslee, commissioner of agriculture and Immigration; 'Charles Schuler, commlsslonv of agrl- culture and immigration nr Louisiana, and Professor W. R. Dodson, direct or of the Louisiana agricultural experiment station. This Is a fine array ft special talent and their talks should be of the greatest benefit to the Maces visited. Such a plan would be welcomed by the people of Georgia. Which of the great systems entering this state will take up thla matter and give Georgia the benefit of this technical education? It would make a warmer place for tho ralDoads, and they would add to the good work they have already accomplished. > MUCH IN LITTLE. Four hours’ hnnl lhlnkliis exhausts the (tunes as much as ten hours of niumml labor. The Congo Free State has an urea of MO.. 009 squnro miles, nnd an estimated papula tlnn of tm less thnn *>,000.000. The public executioner of Austria wears n pnlr of new white gloves every lime be cur rien out n capital sentence, V. W. Martin, of Beloit, Wla., Itns Ju.t paid *1,000 for Lord Bneon, the highest r ‘ ever pnlil for mi Ainerlenn-hred hog. Out of every hundred person. In New York elty sixty-,me .re unmarried, thirty- one married, Are widened nml three di vorced. During tho year 1906 the Methndl.t Knls- copal church sent out .evenly.two new mis sionaries to reinforce It. worker. In the foreign land.. Tho nolle of a railway train can lie heard 800 yard, through the sir, and the whistle of n locomotive n. fnr ni *300 yards. The women of Otmdjons wear ornament. n the upper Up. which I* enlarged by In. sorting .until pieces of wood or atone until the Up protrude, sufficiently. Uanada pnld the following Imtmtles fnr •he first eleven months of the ISOS Itscut year: 8624.1*1 on Iron. Wl ou »teel, 8272,- If, ".Vl?!' 1 .MM* binder twine nnd 8207,018 on crude oil. By CHOLLY KNICKERBOCKER. New York, Sept. 19.—Great times In store for John D. Rockefeller s Rm day school class. The soa of the™’ king has completed plans for the „ Ing of the clans on October 6. A steamer, not an oil burner, by oversight, will take the young metl * Tarry town, from whence the Rockets' ier automobiles will take them to ml magnificent Pocantlco estn,« - “* ciuur nocaeieiier. Just what the scope of the entertat. mem there will be will not he "ot public at present. It Is hinted that ij! leuumndc and home-made d.mchn™ will be served to the guests. While he has no Intention „f ch „ longing Joe Bans for the light u.ioj title, Kermlt Roosevelt hits deternufl to learn the manly art of «elf-d»f e „„ Fred Bycrson. the Instruct ,, „r i,', Ing at the exclusive Groton school i, teaching young Roosevelt. Keren knows a little about the game alraX a* he and his brother, Theodore h,.:' received many lessons from' th.i. father. ntlr Byernon's ability as a teacher , have Its test when Kermlt returns „ the White House from his holiday v , cation and puts on the gloves with president. Mrs. Prudentla L. O. Nugent, wide* of the first commander of the in,], brigade. General Robert Nugent i, dead at her late home, Brooklm 'sh. as 71 years old. Bourke Cockran. Tatnmunv orate, and representative In congress, is yet ready to name the date and piart of hla marriage to Miss Anne id. daughter of the former governor the Philippines. Mr. Cockran lies t u ,. returned from a trip to the West tom his fiancee. She will be In New Y..rk is a few days and the announcement the wedding plans will be made. Assistant United Htntes District At, tomey Francis J. Carmody, win rled the daughter of Mrs. Th„i I Platt nnd whose marltn! troubles hats caused a sensation, declares that his wife loves him still, but they are kept apart by Mrs. Platt. GEORGIANS IN GOTHAM. Sow York, Sept. 10.—Visitor* in N>» York today: ATLANTA—O. L Albert. Mrs. K. Kill*. tV. I. Walker. MACON—Mr*. I*. L». Dempsey. R. Findlay, M. O. Ogden. BAVANNAIV-O. T. Canes. T. Ga ble, II. Hengeval. R. W. Hokenstefg O. N. Jones. Mm. K. A. Well. IN WASHINGTON. Wfluhlngton, Sept. 19.—At Washing' ton hotel*: OEOHOIA—Stewart Phlnlzy, Louis# Phlnlzy, of Augu*tn, at Willard. THIS DATE IN HISTORY. .lortoltlen's trade with the states was 818.tHS.991 In purchases nnd 8I9.0M.471 In Philippine, .bought 86,468,- .. . - .-ip shipment*. Tut M7.worth nf demesne merchandise and ship. lie'll lilt 11•• r MY 0*87 r DRAMATIC NOTES. i»r wex Jones. Among the new piny* to be produced tbit •emion “Rel. the Wnahbnnrd Girl.” U likely to meet with ino*t turrets. Hnl It an Indus- trtous girl, who earns her nnmc from her energy lu disposing of the weekly wnth. The wicked Inndlord tries to win her nwny with his gold from Jsck. the Iceinnn, who loves Hu I “with nil the devotion of nu hon est wen’s heart." .... • The rllnmx I* s thrilling scene In the dumbwaiter shaft. Sal shin* up the rope to e*4*«i>e the landlord, who full* with it dull hud nnd Inipnles hluiself upon the Ire tong*. Jsek Jumps Into the dumbwnlter slid pulls himself —**'“ “— “ Hnl as *h« falls la r" ' ■ covers n waiiei uikh. — had dropped It. It contftlns 1150,000 In bill*. Jack says. "Keep It; he forfeit* hi* money who panties * woman." (Cheers.) They kee pit. (Curtain.) lent play without words and music. Faust" will tie dramatised by a well iwii author, wh« - * * song writer to comj A novelty In - nounred. King A wants his son to marry King D‘s * ter. ... son goes to visit King R'a court, lie meet* King D’s daughter aud her maid. maid end fall In love D'Annunslo hss become so exciting nnd nnreasonnble In the mounting of hi* play* that neither pose nor any other player of note will undertake his new piece. PLAY8 AND PLAYER8. The name of the comedy In which Mary Manncrlng will appear has been changed from "Iaiidy Bctty r ’ to "Mtstrr** Betty. A prototype of Andrew Carnegie Is to be seen In "The MeiiHiire of a Man,’ 7 noon to be brought out at the Cheatuut street theater, riillndclphln. Corn Maynard I* the author of the play. "Richard, the Brtten," a story by Cyrna TownsendIflrady, la to In* dramatised by kdward Peple for the use of Henry E. IMxey later lu the ncuson. Herbert Kelcey nnd Rffl* Shannon are to head the cast of Charles Klein's latest play, "The IlniiKhter* of Men,” to be produced by Harry II. Harris. The dlntlnctlon of Pavld Relnsco's new theater In New York, the Htuyvesanr. t* to \h* a double stage, at the hack of which one scene may he set while another I* proceed- lug before the npectator*. Then the stage swing* the new siMMie before their eye*, nnd the play advance* without halt or break in the Illusion. la*co nnd Mr*. I^alie rnrirr .......... permanent. Mr*. Carter ha* signed a flve-1 year contract with Mr. iMIUnghnm. while Mr. Itelnnco Is looking over the Held care fully for some one to replace Mrs. Carter Ini hi* plan*. Meanwhile a relief of Blanche Rates ban replaced the medallion of Mr*. Carter that ha* long l»ceu a feature on tUe> drat leaf of the program at the Uehucg |»eU hither 913,237,927. t'on.Hl >1. A. Jewett. »f Trobltnnd, Tur key, reports the cstnhll.hmeiit of a new steamship service lietween Liverpool nml linriK of till- llliiok Son. Duo of It* object. * to forward American good. destined for countries tiontorlug on or lirhlml tho Ilhiok Tho Japanese foreign trn.V for tho drat fir. month, oft hi. your amounted to 8174.- 000,090. or 819.990.009 1pm thnn tn tlto oitrro- riinmlliis fivo month, of 1*96. Tho whole of tho Ijoellne wn..in Imimrt., In which thrre *»-s targ. fulling off liornuM- of tho p|o.e William 'll. Nowninn. of tho Now York Contra! rallroml. hol.l. tho rooonl this your for dlrretorahlp. nml trunim-nhlp.. Ilo roti- V-' *V 11 jry•<. 1 "terct. Ill l« oor- pontiMBK Fn-dcrtok I iidortvi.nl. |>ro.l<|out »re.5!Sbftr ’ U ™ filrcctorahSpe SEPTEMBER 19. 1737—Gottingen university opened. Uftt-Robert Emmet put on trial. 18X>—Ethan Allen Hitchcock, secretary ef the Interior, liorn. 1890— WIIHam Hnteraon. Canadian mluUtff of cuHtnui*. Imrii. 18U—Many live* lost lu the wreck of tbs .Queen Charlotte. 1893—General Rosecrnn* liegnn attack ou tl Confederate forces at lukn. Ml**. 1871—Iduistroua lire In Virginia City, Net. 1881—President Garfield died at Lonf itmiu'h. N\ J. 1901—President McKluley burled at Canton, Ohio. NEWBERRY COLLEGE WILL OPEN NEXT FRIDAY. Special to The Georgian. Newberry, S. C., Sept. 19.—The for mal opening of Newberry College will be held on Friday morning, September 2S, In the college auditorium. Ad dresses win be delivered by distin guished friends of the Institution, and aa a port of the formal opening a re ception will be tendered the new stu dents by the Young Men's Christian Assoclntton that nigtfi. Rev. \V. H. Oreever, editor of The Lutheran t'hnreh Visitor, has accepted President Scher er's Invitation to deliver the principal address on that occasion, and It Is ex pected that Rev. M. O. J. Kret*. presi dent of the South Carolina synod, will nlso be present, anil address the stu dents. Aa usual, the pastor, of New- opening eietvlie,f n * Ct,Ve ‘ >art ,n ,he OOOODODO<IOOOO<HJOOOOOOOO<IOO O NOTES BY THE WAY. O By C. D. Thomas. OOOOODOOOOO«HXH»OOOOOOW> Nover put any one off till tomorro* that you can do today. It la a pleasant change to cat rooking apples, and It helps the druggists. Do not walk away from strange doja however threatening their appearance. Run. Remember that the only thing that wears Jewelry where It can't be seen ' the oyster. Don't be an oyster. Let your diamonds shine and your pearu glimmer until they give other w - Jealous spasms. Remember that peekaboo cheese » made In other countries than b« fixer* land. Fudge Is an excellent substitute for beefsteak, and Is less troublesome w cook, nerve with mashed potatoes ar«i Imitation linoleum. Burlap makes an excellent lining U the bath tub. Bee stings are said to be good M rheumatism. Bulldogs are good for slowness. An up-ended tack Is good for thi. tired feeling. The Fourth of July Is a great curt for deafness. A red-hot stove Is good for chills If you feel generally on the eat plenty of sugar. Ham I* u with sugar; why not you? Home-made pies make useful arbee tos mat*. In buying a dog be careful I ’ .xxmj Ine his teeth. If they arc strong >» f sharp, pick another dog. You n can tell when your dog may > ■ n a dislike for you. A disused trolley car make* a >'■' Ing houseboat If you can Indu" float. Egg* make a good break fa'- 1 They can be Cooked In several j An egg boiled until It l» I"*. 1 "L* ltclous with bacon or strswberrs J Goldfish are sensible little Ion*. They live In glass hou. never throw stones. Remember that so long. MY™, j;” see a mouse you're safe. It " :’ nl - he gets out of sight that he rsn •« [fi| you. In case of danger Jump • j' , :m , bath tub and turn on the ' u|1 water. The most ferocious m™ 1 TM not venture to harm you tne" same plan will serve against > toe*. Bleep with your head water