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THE ATLANTA GEORGIA*.
THURSDAY. JAKUART 10. W7.
By THI GEORGIAN COMPANY.
At 9 Writ Alabama Pi . Atlanta. Ca
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<;t:<»lt«SIAN in- II.nil
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signed. n* nn *•»Ideuee uf good faith,
though the luimra wilt be withheld If
requested lfeleete«| innimai iIpt* will
not lir rriit’-Hnl unless stamp* me M*nt
for the pnr|.<-.<
Till: IlKlUllilAN ut.nl- HU nni-lmili
nr nhjrril»n*l.(.- aihi-rtl.lnit N-ltlii-i-
d-», It inllkl Hbl.hr nr nnj lb|nnr ml.
oril 1'I.ATFotlM Tin- tinirrinll
atimt. fnr Altf.nU'. iinmliix II- nnn
rn mill clmlrl, light plant.. n. U
naw ntriN ft* wnt.rw«rk-
dn i hi. .n>l grt g». «• I"
j Hi
Till. .Ilnlll.l-
W dnnr nt Mint, Tin- llnnrglan In-
ll.r.. that If airin'! iiillwar* <‘»n In-
ntmratnl •inni'.-fnlll by Knrn|i»Bii
.ill... in 1 lu>I , r.\ tli.r. la nn g""T
niroiii why tln-r i nnnnt In- an nn.rnli'il
b.ri' lint nn I t» lnr till. r«u
linfnri' nn nn- rn.ilr fnr »•• big nil till-
d.rt.hlllg mill A tin II t it .hnlilil an! II.
fan. In that illn-lbm N11IV.
Thai Oregon Idea of trial divorced
la not novel. All dlvorrett-are aecuretl
by trial.
A Parlalan aeronaut died and left
~jla~*ir ahi|i m ihe t***-. They pughl
t» fly high on that legary.
In live year. Ihe population of
France haa Inrreaaed ,leaa than non.-
COO. The alork certainly l.as an cany
time there.
That Tenna man who aaw a flaming
aword in the aky mual have been null
Halley, and dreamed what he wanted
to happen 10 the aenator January 22.
Out In Honolulu the native* have
rung In a variation on "aeelng thing*."
They. re'-irt It ''floalliut roef“ in the
hirbur there.
Item* about pn|*nn In randy eon-
tlnue lo appear In Ihe paper*. Thought
7 the pure food law berame efleellve
January 1.
— *T>. ahlp-auhaldy bill aeemrto have
gone on the reef* for thl* wwitltm. el
any rate.
It la late to Gamble on who will U
the next l’nltrd States senator from
South Dakota.
The lowly worm haa turned again.
Cltliena of 'North Yakima, Washing
ton. confiscated 27 cars of coal belong-
lngclo Ihe Northern Pacific. reversing
the usual mode uf procedure.
“He sure your alna will find vnu
out." A Harvard profeaaor who had
posed for years aa a woman-hater. I*
nuw the defendant In a |3f>.nO0 breach
of promise suit.
A wealthy New York girl ha* Jual
iucceeded In brldalliig a riding uiaaler
of that city. However. It waa not a
blind bridal
Here'* the gnat and dynamite »tory--
tevised and up t<> dale, and the shock-
tng part of It, ll mine* from M*a*n-
chu*ett* Rata ate ten pound* of Ihe
explosive belonging lo a larnier and
now rodent* on hi* place nre being
treated with tender rnnalderallnii.
ATLANTA’S MAONIF I CENT ARGUMENT. •
The Georgian presents today In full the magnificent argument offered
by Atlanta, to prove that the subtreasury for the southeastern atgtea
should ba located to thla csplial city of the Boulil, :
Thla argument waa presented to the ways and means committee by
Hr. Joseph A. McCord, president of the Atlanta Clearing House Associa
tion, and by Mr. John Temple Graves, editor of The Georgian. Mr. Wal
ler 0. Cooper eiaike for two mlnulea on the general need of a sub
treasury In the South.
The superb and convincing array of facia and figures which It con-
taint. waa complied ebb-fly by Ihe painstaking and Intelligent Investiga
tion of Mr. McCord and Mr. Walter 0. Cooper, of the Chamber of Com
merce, before going lo Washington. These figures were taken from
the Federal cen*n* and from government report* and are beyond all
quefltlon or cavil from any aouree whatever
They preaenl snrh an array of facia and figures aa have perhaps
never been collated before In demonstrate the van superiority of Atlan
ta over lla alater elite* of the Boutb and the auperb and growing Impor-
tanre of Georgia’s capital In the Industrial world. With these figures In
hand no argument wa* really q'ecettory. and It became Instantly appa
rent as a>mu aa Ihe pamphlet containing thla presentation' waa distribu
ted among the member* of the ways and means committee, that Atlan
ta had landed an argument an Instantly Impressive that Its case so far
aa the Judgment of |i« Judge* waa concerned, waa practically won.
No other city presented an argument one-half an compact, ao official
and so convincing. Savannah, with great generosity, declared that It
waa the finest paper that It had ever seen presented In a almllar context,
nnd Its gallant *pokraman. Colonel A. K. Lawton, paid a high tribute to
It In preaenling Savannah's rlalin*
The argument for Illrmiiighaui waa pitifully scant In any logical rea
son or argument of statistic* In Industrial wealth and Importance. Gov
ernor Johnson's speech wa* graceful In delivery, charming. In humor,
full of rare fun and afforded great amusement to the committee, but aa
an argument It waa lot ally without effect or Influence.
Next .to Atlanta’* argument Ha vnnmh’s adpilrahle presentation,
made through Colonel Ijiwtnn and Mr. Williamson, waa the mo*t Im
pressive of the day, and was really a Tactful and argumentative
plea which could have prevailed ny sheer right of merit over any other
city Ilian Atlanta.
Fiery man who loves Atlanta nnd goes abroad to apeak of It abould
lie In possession of the accurate facts nnd argument* which demonstrate
im lirtiatiH'm aim HiiiwriiirH}, iindTBc nn.renin prewnta today in full
these magnificent and* Inspiring figures In order to equip every evangel
of Atlanta with new and Inspiring Information for the future.
With a ilrli n document In hand aa this from sources of Information
w-htrli no imin rnn question, nn Atlanta man should ever he at loss to
make plain Atlanta's superior greatness and the reaaon for It.
And, meanwhile, m tho secretary of the Chamber of Commerce and
to tlie president of. the Atlanta Clearing llnuse Association for the In
vestigation and compiling of these facts, the city la Indebted for another
and a signal public service.
Ita laugh—not the last laugh, but a good one which will Huger until It
cornea Atlanta's time to smile the smite that won’t come off.
The fight for a Southern subtreasury la rested for a time. The
wrangle I* at end lust now, and the entente cordial la restored between,
the cities competing foi'tbe prise.
But wjien the record of this strife It writ; when Ita coufareneea. Ita
caucuses and Ita hearings are all done, the one luminous streak of humor
which will outlive the atreai and storm of battla will ba the memory
of the historic snipe hunt on which these naughty boya of Birmingham
carried the Innocent sons of South Carolina, and few of ue wilt forget the
picture of that guileless statesman of Columbia holding yat Jxla empty
snipe beg In the twampe of the Congaree.
BOSTON STILL BAKES BEANS ON SUNDAY.
Extremes In reform sometimes awing tho pendulum of public senti
ment tetering the other way. and bring upon the head of the reformer
withering blasts of denunciation.
So In dasalc Boston. Police Commissioner O'Meara, spurred to
emulation by other redoubtable reformers, began hla official career with
a mighty muck-raking. He harked back to old blue laws.- and the first
shake-out of thr box pinched a cooh thousand cltliena for Infractions of
laws their great-grandfathers had forgotten were on the statute book*.
But Commissioner O'Meara went a bit too far. The Roitontse did
not object to being good by legal enactment, but they did rise up In their
•night and swat the ardent but misguided reformer when he said the bak
ing of beana had to atop on Sunday. Hero was the trampling In the dust
of the sacred and Inalienable right of the peoplo to the very staff of life!
Had Commissioner O'Mearn reached up with profane hand and ripped
from Us place on the capitol dome the Golden Codfish, emblem of Massa
chusetts' glory, he would have lieen guilty .of no graver crime than to for
bid the Hoatonege Its Sabbath crock of baked beana. Hut If Commission
er O'Meara waa unwise, the Judge waa not. Every bean baker waa dis
missed with the Judicial Injunction to go and bake beana whenever,
wherever and however they pleased. So peace’ brood* again on Beacon
Hilt. ■
Tne blue-law we* attTtght so lung as It remained cerulean ora glow
ing ultramarine, but when It touched beans It became moribund, ghastly,
and Boston rose up and smote It hip and thigh.
Army-Navy Orders
—and—
movement of veeaete.
If I’ncle Joe Cannon really sprung
that ator.v of the dog. the ventriloquist
and the German barkeeper as an nrtg
Inal, Joe Miller ought to file a hill' of
exceptions.
San Antonto, Tex., ts strong In to* |
legislature John "Ft Union ts the rep j
rewnUtlVc
Duck raiser* have formed a trust ‘
Lot of lame.one* will be eligible lot
Ihe board of dlreetoraie about March
4th.
Mr. Dooley thinks George Washing
ton waa a bird. Well, he did light Into
g cherry tree.
~Hoot> -- imperigHstir
speech has aroused even that genial
humorist. Mark Twain, to visions of
an American monarchy.
After all. It Isn’t the woman In the
cate nearly ao often as It Is the other
woman.
Protestor .Richard Burton, of the
University of Minnesota. It lecturing
on what a novel ihoutd be. The an
thor believe* It should he read
A Chicago maq hat come hark from
Africa with a lot of Coqgo love ditlle*
Somebody get a strangle hold on him
before he starts another epldeuilc of
e-ton songs.
COLUMBIA'S HENCEFORTH HISTORIC "SNIPE BUNT."
The sudden and ylolent attachmeii t which _* I ini n g up between Co-
lumblit und Birmingham—lietween Alabama mid Carolina—over Ihe loca
tion of the aubtreasury furnished one of the mysteries and no small part
of the humor of that now famous contention.
At Ihe suggestion of Secretary show-. In seeking a way to establish
some consensus of agrecuieul aa to a location, Hupn-aentatlve Livingston
of Georgia called a conference of Alabama. Georgln and Carolina and
Florida-the territory which ihe secretary of hi* own accord pronounc
ed eligible for thi- site To thla conference Atlanta's congressman sum
moned Atlanta's eommlitee, und nine Atlanta men representing the city
council, Ihe linnks uml Ihe Chamber of Commerce, traveled 64* mile* to
reach Washington on Friday. Ihe 4th of January, Ihe dale named and
understood by Ihe parlies concerned.
Arriving In Washington on Friday morning, the Atlanta committee
was Informed rhnt, nn Ihe evening before, the representative* from Co-
lumWaand Birmingham - had arbitrarily withdrawn front this conference
or caucu*. to which they hnd previously offered no objection. They were
also Informed Hint ihe Alabamn Carellna combination hail without any
oilier authority than their own sweat wills, called a second conference
-«r-cnucu* for Monday. January" 7th, lo which both Mr. I,lvlng*ltm and
Mr. Harriett had objected. II waa evident therefore- that tile Blrmlng
ham ami Columbia rloau communion club had concluded that they could
uuL win in the caucus uf the lib. and therefore broke It, whereupon
they urannltcd- n:ir,th.-rrmtcq- cut the fth on grounds which justified
the belief Hint they rniild win. It would seem clear that Georgia had
Just aa much right to withdraw from the all too evidently satisfactory
caucus of the 7th a* the two united state* had from tlukcqunlly binding
enure, of the 7th. * -■
Hut Atlanta must needs alt down and watt until the 7th for develop
ment*. • _ ,*
Meanwhile Carolina and Alabama were Insapsttblc. Illrmliigham
amt Columbia were twins with but a single thought—to heat Atlanta.
Hirst tie that tie that hound their hearts |n Christian love.
lint Ihe why, no man from Georgia could knnw or understand.
Georgia was closer to both states than either to each other. Georgia
was more convenient by five hours and three hundred miles to Hlrmlng-
ham than Columbia, ami a aithlreastiry In Atlanta would be as much
more convenient to Columbia than In Birmingham. Time, urenmmoda'-
llon. distance, convenience, and every material reason should have
made A t In in n Iho second cliulru uf each.
Ami yet, these delectable rltleahung around t-ach other's necks with
a fervor of affection a* faithful as it was strange. Alabama boasting
itself through <■*-Governor Johnson as the daughter of Georgia and lltr-
mlnghant proud ns Its granddaughter, prosecuted a flirtation with Its
second cousin across the Snvnnnah In a wav to shock and grieve the ma
ternal ancestor's roiiuncrrlul soul.
Never was ihe mystery explained until the luoiuctiloiia session of the
ways and means committee before which we all appeared. And then
the mystery fell by chance Into the open for our laughter and our tears.
Charles Hyatt, of Columbia, wa*Introduced by Mr. Underwood tospeak
» sni'il for Birmingham. Mr. Ilyatt hnd prepared nn anticipatory speech
fin' Columbia, ami rising without preparation for Hirmtiighunt's cause,
this guileless nml gushing Carnllntnil let the eat out of the Img. or the
snipe out of the net," by declaring that Itlrintngham had persuaded Car
olina lo vole for the Alabama elly now. on the plea thnt If HriTiilugham
were selected a! thi* time, there would soon be Ihe need for aunt her
subtrrnwury. nnd this Columbia slumld have by Ihe aid of Birmingham,
upon Ihe Joint plea lhal Allnnla was loo near lo Ihe aubtreasury at Bir
mingham and .Columbia Just the right distance between Slagtown and
Washington.
At this point the Georgia delegation was affected to tear*.
Illrnilughaui. the sophomore, had literally carried Columbia, the po
litical freshman, upon » successful snipe hunt?"
Did you ever travel, thoughtful reader, upon a college snipe
hunt? Did you thrill with the story of the snipe abounding In a certain
forest near a meadow, and Ihe ease with whlrh these splendid birds
could he driven al night up a long gully Into an open bag held by a
guileless gentleman behind s brush, who at the proper moment had only
to draw the strings and then go home laden with game? And did you
ever wait through the long hours of a freefing night for the snlpo which
never came ?
Alas for Carolina's capital! Birmingham has carried her on a snipe
Uual which shir Kill no it'i forget Carolina Is loo old In |<olHlcs lo be
lieve all the** stories of siihtroasury *nl|ie In the glades ami meadow,
of the Southeast. There are only nine of these rare birds In all Ihe coun
try nml only one In all the South. II will be many a year before a brace
of them come southward again. They don't drive readily at nightfall,
and the sight of a guileless Carolinian Billing with nn open hag al Co
lumbia Is not likely to seduce them from discretion and geography. If.a
siibtrcnsury should he located at Birmingham the next shy bird of that
species feeding southward would not be likely lo go np the gully that
leads through the Con as ree swamp to Ihe Carolina rapltal. but would be
much more likely to trip up the waterways of the Southern rnil lo the
more central nnd convenient iwilut of Charlotte. N. C.
There Isn't much danger of a aubtreasury at Hirmtnghnai. Con
gress nnd geography will Is- too kind to Columbia for that, and Atlanta
will serv- all her slsler's needs with promptness and facility, It grieves
us sore to sie our lovely sister silling In Ihe Palmetto scrub holding an
open bag. walling for the artful haters of Birmingham and the bird
tbal Will uvu-r collie. The fun la all over now, and Slagtown has had
8ELL YOUR MINING STOCK.
Collier's for January 12 brings soma sound advice to the American
public. It urges the small Investor to look with suspicion upon the well-
engraved mining atock certificate* that flood the market. It says:
it you have bought mining stock*, sell them. Offer them back to tho
man who sold them. Offer them at the same price. Offer them at 10
l>er cent lea*. Offer them at 20 per cent leas. Thl* will accomplish your
own disillusionment, and save you money, for you might have bought
more. It will also effect exposure of the person who sold you the stock.
Are you thinking of buying shares In Poodle-dog Inflated or Hoptoad Jump
Along? Don't. And thl* "don't" la without qualification of any kind.
To women chiefly, wives of husbands of the higher wage-earning claaa,
Mils paragraph la commended. Not that It Is their folly we Inveigh
sgalnst. They are the ones who knnw the value of aavlngirand they may
be tn rime to «avn-atattmorhusbandYrom iin ncrnMneieuiabte folly, tf
you are tempted by Ihe full-pago advertisements published by the news
paper partners of mining swindlers, don't! If some acquaintance la urg
ing you to buy shares, he either profits by tho aale or .la himself deceiv
ed. Daniel Guggenheim Is the greatest miner In the world. He and hi*
six brother* own mine* that aggregate a button dollars. That family
knows more about mines than most of the rest of the world combined.
The other day Mr. Guggenheim utterod a solemn warning against "the
tlmay character of the mining Blocks now finding a ready market." "One
In three hundred." he said. "Is a conservative estimate of the propor-
lion of prospects that eventually fulfill their promise." Within a week
after he uttered lhat warning Mr. Guggenheim made public announce
ment that he had himself been caught, lie had bought a famous and
widely talked-of mine; and when he discovered he had been deceived, bo
harked out of the trap a* a caah lo*« of 1“,S00,000.. When Mr Guggenheim
ssld one In three hundred, he referred to Ihe more or leas reputable
mines whoso shares arc sold on the regular exchanges. If he had Includ
ed Ihe mines whose shares are advertised at 6 and 10 cents In the Sun
day paper*, he would have said one In thirty thousand. If- this para
graph prevent* Ihe swindling of a few uninformed persons, preserves the
savings of a few families from Ihe adventurers about to acquire them. It
will hare done well.
Army Ordar*.
Washington. Jan. 1"—The following
orders are announced: „ _ .
Lieutenant Colonel Herbert E. Tuth-
erly. retired, detailed for duty wllh
organised mllltl* "f New Hampahlre.
Navel Ordere.
Rear Admiral M. Thom**, lo Vir
ginia. aa commander second division,
first squadron. Atlantic fleet.
Rear Admiral W. H. Emery, lo Ohio,
as cotnmdndor second division, second
squadron. Atlantic fleet.
Lieutenant E. H Jackson, detached
Hancock, to Astatic station.
Lieutenants C. A. Gardiner and W.
Norris, detached navy department, to
Ohio. _ ,
Lieutenant A. W. Preesy. lo Ilrook-
-^Knslgn W. R. RaudenlHireh, detached
navv department, to duty connection
fitting out of Kansas, at Camden.
Ensign F. W. Oshurn. detached navy
department. , ,
Ensign A. 8. Ktbhee. detached navy
department, to Independence.
Ensign C. f?, Moses, detached navy
department, to Asiatic statlonT
Movements of Vaaaala.
The following movement* of vessel*
have been reported to the bureau of
navigation:
ARRIVED-I-January 7. Aanktnn. al
Guantanamo; January 9. Chatlanoogu.
at Slanllp.
BAILED—January fl. Cleveland, from
Clenfuegos for Havana; Morris.- from
Fernandlnn, Key West; Potomac, from
fivdney. Nova Scotia, for Bay of Is
lands: Connecticut, front Hampton
Roads for Culebra.
GEORGIANS IN GOTHAM.
GOSSIP!
By CHOLLY KNICKERBOCKER.
New York, Jan. 10.—Invitations hat,
been Issued for th* wedding or .vk,
Pauline Morton to J. Hopkins Hmro,,
Jr., In Rt. Thomas Episcopal church
on February 2. Th* engagement „
announced several week* ago. but ti. a
date for th* marriag* baa only )u„t
been arranged.
Mi*a Morton la the beautiful y,., mc
daughter of Paul Morton, formerly se. .
retary of the navy In President R<m««.
veil's cabinet, and now president cf
the Equitable Life Assurance Hoclm-.
Mr. Smith Is a noted yachtsman, n-r-h
many millions, and son of th* reiii.-i
banker, J. Hopkins Smith. Hla y». i, t-
Phcle Rain, won the kaiser's cut- at
Kiel three years ago. -Aa he c Rp .
lured Hie rup Mr. Smith captured Mi>,
Morton. He was one’among many mm.'
petltor*. Mlsa Morion, who Is n-e
only 20 years old, had ao many young
men wlmiiem-tu Washington the vf, ir
of her debut that her father had m
Issue whitt constituted an ultimatum
Gist Ills daughter wa* not to lie , n .
caged until she had been heart fr-e
for at least one season.
It wa* believed that this ultimatum
prevented her marriage to Thorns*
Chalmers, the young Chicago million.
alre. of w hom she was especially fond
Mr Chalmers drifted away and Mr,
Smith remained year after year to ill-,
lance all claimant* to the heart of U\«
beautiful young woman.
Miss Mary Oanby will be maid -.f
honor. When Mr. Morton was pr... 1-
dent of the Santa Fc railroad and Hi - t
In Chicago MISS Morion and Miss Can.
hums. When they were cir'.
New York. Jan. Ill—Here nre
tbe visiters In New York tmlny:
ATLANTA-T. Weaver, T. ti. '
II. r. hleradden.
At'UmTA—Mr*. N. I.. Ilasselt.
Where the Georgia Delegation
Live in Washington.
SENATORS.
Augustus O. Bacon. 1767 Oregon sve
nue.
A. 8. Clay, Ihe Normandie.
CONGRESSMEN
w r |h*» lllifiH'j, ...
C. I*. Bartlett, tlie ShnrHtam.
Thomas M. Hell, the Iroquois.
W. G. Brantley, the Chupln.
T. W. Hirdwlek. the Shoreham.
\V. M. Howard, the Bancroft.
Gordon Bee. the Hhorehani.
K. B. Lewis, the .Metropolitan.
J. W.’ Overstreet, the- Metropolitan.
L. F. Livingston, 1916 Hiltmoro street.
J. M. Griggs, the Metropolitan.
DR. SOLOMON MISQUOTED.
7. VESUVIUS ROOSEVEL7
From Collier** For January 12.
The ordinary hill which remains forever still,
All covered o'er with apedmens of botany.
Im hugely unfc and sane; but Its heights seem rather plain
And Its silence breeds political monntnpy.
I myself prefer a mount with n crater ns its fount.
Dropping firebrands like the thunder Ntorrns of Pluvlus—
There Is something h|lf *atanlc in conditions no volcanic.
Yet we’re proud of 4tur Political Vesuvius.
With a curious, eulfurenus
Rumbling, grumbling roll of thunder.
Teddy’s going to erupt—
St ami from under!
Where the grafter sleeps content, suddenly the air Is rent
With a blast like that which burled Herculaneum;
Hallway lobbies cough and choke Jn a cloud of flame and smoke.
And the fonscrlpt Fathers get It In the cranium.
Now Chicago beef Is shook, now the poor old Spelling Book
Shouts, "Have mercy, sire! your heat will crack the shell o* me!”
N*»w the mountain heaves lts shoulders and upheaves a ton of
boulders
While tiie sparks descend and roast the luckless Bellamy.
With a be« tic, apoplectic
Howling, growling roll of thunder,
Teddy's going to blow up—
Stand from under!
Though there’s sometimes scarce a puff from his lid! that’s Just a
Muff. .
For hi* calmer moments never mean security.
And the Prophets yell: "Lookout! hen Intending for to spout —
There'll be trouble In the very near futurity."
No. we «an t foresee Juat what,, but his crater's getting Imt.
And the coals will soon be dropping, ns they must, again
Singeing up the Tariff's tatters nnd the mossy old Stamlparers—
There:s no telling where Vesuvius will bust sgaln.
With a Jouncing, nation-bouncing.
Humping, thumping roll of thunder,
Teddy’s going for to spout —
Stand from under!
T« the Bdltor of The Georgian.
I wish to make the following ntntcm
In referenci* to n Utile tnntter that ii|<|«
I who told I»r. Ha*!union uml othe...
In our office that Mr. Otdkmov hud etmrgeil
members Of cutitiell Willi being elected by
_ _ - - - - )!efendlng his |*4>-
sltlon sgnlnat the high llreune ordtunm'e.
he Raid. "I siu pledgiMl, not tit Interfere
with the present Itrenre regulation*; we
tire ill pledged and elected on that plat
form, and 1 don’t think U right to raUs
these IIcenaee no ranch "
If this Ir nut mhnlttiug nml ebnrglug
thut council witR elected by the liquor |hmi-
{ ilc. | do not know the meaning of tin*
ntigtingc. Liquor men and their supporter*
And R?4u}MUJil*nr*- uuuU* ihe lb **m»** regain*
lh ?AlTl
Paradoxes of Travel.
foliintloia. Mo.. In culled by the native*
the Athene of that ntnte. Amt tbe twlttnr
of the town paper. The Kernld, Iirr l*»en
enlightening the RtmlentR mu! Iioitrdlug
house keepers of t'oliimblu ns r» •hut they
may not (tint If ever they wnmlcr out of
the conituoiiwfitltli of paw paw h nml |*er-
When he expect*.-lie Is often dlflAp|Mdutcd
There nre no onions In Iteriumln for the
visitor. They nre nil exported. No inline-
Is grown In Kgvpt. The khedive hits
ultlvutlon. There nre no
Mount of nitvo* The
linve destroyed them.
>nt frogs. The I'nrlstmi
hint for dnyat wlth-
g a single frog. |Huh whlskv
Is drunk In Scotland nml gcoli-h uhUky
In Dublin. The Holland 4 hoes.- Is seldom
seen nt The Hague a ml N» iifelintel cheese
Is ntmle In New York Kansas Pity Is In
MlRMttirr nml New im-Ioihim mi the east
side ef the Mississippi river. The chief
Justice of tlie supreme court »m Kgvpt Is n
forbidden It
•dive trees on tho
Turks and tourlsti
The Krem h do md r
rrstituntu!* tuny Im* *
lit finding a Nlngli
in short frocks they pledged each oth*r
that which e%*er wgs married first
would have the other ms maid of honor.
The other attendants will he fr-.m
New York, Washington and Chicag-t.
Rev. Ernest M. Htltres, of St. Thonm
church, who was Paul Morton's past r
In Chlcngo. will read the cerem..nv.
Thla w III add another to his long :nt •
of fashionable weddings.
MImm Alice Marquand. whose mar
riage to Alan Fullerton, son of Admit d
Sir John Fullerton, was arrangeil Ih«»
Neason over in Ixmdon, Is having s um*
really authentically artistic gown<«
made. Hho will he married February
In St. Margarets church. Westminster.
—Few-gUlcloAtulety -are m> -w-eU
or the art of clotheH as Miss Alice, fa.
mlllnrly t ailed "Azxle,” .Marquand Fb*.
Ing the daughter of the late H*nry
Marquand. of thla city, wffiose art «
lections arc famous, she knows some
thing of the lore of art which Is nlwav?
a valuable and practical asset In the
matter of gowning.
furthermore, she made her dehut -n
Paris, some years ago, and afterward*
was presented at court, so that with
her art. experience and her bronze :•*•!
wavy hair, she Is more apt to be the
subject for tho canvases of artists »n
Paris and London. In that case h«*r
gowns, like the rare mellow laces In
corporated In them, will become his
toric.
Mrs. Roosevelt occupied a box at th# •
Boston symphony concert at Washing*
ton and hnd with her Mrs. Metcalf.
Hear Admiral and Mrs.. Cowles. Hep*
resentatlve Longwctrth and Mrs. Wng-
ner. Mrs. Longworth did not teemn-
pany them, it being her first congre-*
sional reception day of the season. In
tlie evening the president and Mrs.
Roosevelt were the guests at dinner of
Heoretary and Mrs. JBhaw.
IS WOMAN THE EQUAL OF MAN?
By PROFESSOR OTTO WEININGER.
The further we go Into the analysis of
wontnn's elslui to esteem the more we must
deny her of wltst Is b*f!> nnd noble and
beautiful.
The last thing I want t.» ndvooate la the
Aalstle atand|Hilut with regard to tlie treat
ment of women, but It I-* quite possible to
desire the legal equality of uien nnd women
without tudlevlug In tholr moral mol Intel
lectnnt equality. Ju*t In condemning to
the Utmost any ltnr*!in»s* In the male j "*."
(tertllhcUT Ilf Ml0 Ti'tr.-iTl?-*?T .die .TOCI ItitV ; r '
overlook the tremendous contrast aud o»
guide differences Itetween thrill
There art* no men to wh *m there Is no
trn re of the trun*<vio|etit win* are alto-
get her laid,
tact op|u»site of ilegenerntloii;
thut l» to any, It must bo ni>ktiow|e«|gei| thnt
made a slej* fernsr*I nn.J gnlne.l
. - , I gnlii»*|
ver thetnaelves; from the lihdogl
«al At.iio||Mdnt they are just ns little or as
t.iu«'b phenomena uf ilejpqionttloii as are
womanish men.
Woman Is neither high-minded nor low-
minded. Rtroug inlmlctl nor weak minded
" Mltod
Itlsen of the stale of Florbln. nml the In .
if tho anti Armrntnn party In flip Turkish
empire ta nn Armenian."
Tha Sargaant-Major'a Death.
A Mergeunt major of nn Inrun;r\ teuluieut
stutlitniHl In Uremon whs recently t>enteu«'« > d
to n slight illmlpllunry punl-liiiMlit for
having mortally wotintletl u mu 11 «ith u
revolver lit the 4-oursn «»f 11 tight. ||** up
i»eifled iig.ibiBt llils. but whs Infornieil thnt
ItU uppeill hnd been relented 11«* t||,-n «ir
dertHl Hi* men t«* l»»n«l tb»*tr rttle* with td;\nk
••nrtrldge*. toil duilnc llmlr tb*.eiiee re
Imolerl them with twill mriihlg.* 11. then
drew up Id* men In tiring line nml • trefullv
• liotvel them how to ultii thel- rifles
straight nt lit-* Instri. With tit
Among those who sailctl for K»ir*o-s
yesterday were Prince and Prince-*
Cantacusene, who have spent sever'd
months in this country. The Cantacu-
sene children will remain with the'r
grandmother. Mrs. Frederick D. Ornn\
for a month longer, and will be accom
panied to their Russlnn home by their
aunt, Mrs. Potter Palmer.
Rspednl Interest* was felt In the first
formal "at home’* of Mrs. Nicholas
Longworth. formerly Miss Alice Roose
velt. Hundreds of members of society
ailed upon nnd were cordially
.orned by Mrs. Longworth. who t—
celved alone In the red finished draw •
Ing room of the Eighteenth street
house. In Washington. In which -lie
first went to live after her marriage tu
Representative lobngworth.
Mrs. Longworth’s gown of pale b’ »*
silk with Japanese embroidery ab* v i*.
the skirt, was diMlnctly auggestlvi f
her Oriental trip and the rare present
given her by the mikado. Miss M”' -
gery Nott was Mrt».-Ie»ngworth’s "
assistant, presiding nt the tea tni'i-
The tlrawing room was a bewildering
array of silver vases, urns, loving * •»!•■*
and tea services. A huge tape«f”
allotni« the wall. These are all pr*—
ents of the bride of last winter.
one of the most Interesting of the re-
i options of the day nt Wnshincc n
wa* at tin .Inpanose embassy, wi" **
VlromtesF A0U0 held her first •’
hnmf" I11 the new embassy. The st •
*f the Sherman house
1 aim in* then ortlereil /’Fire." nml fell with j taken on tnhny signs of Japanese «
patlon, with superb screens, plrtur*’*.
| vase* nnd a huge buddha In bin***
, j nnmentatlon «tn the walls of the si •
wlm.it mkeii from i drawing room. Tea and chocolate "• •*.
lelriit iint,- geiiuiii.it j served from a fable decorated with car-
mi v uotnliie. ir ii-sm nations and ferns.
bullet* tliroilgtl Ills henrt.
Vitality of Satda.
Whll.
IlnMIlt
Egypt 1
lug when plan
inletful
oil. II
linltlle's piv-4t>t\.i
llntl of Hie life 4'f *ee«|s eollle t«» life fioin
time lit time One of the III.IM nolenin
thy of these refers to .,-e,l- tnkeii from Fort
1’oncer. nlHMit c.*t ntile- tr<un ihe !«.»»■ t»v
• he Pwtry party In iv«. huvlng been e\
|*ost*i| In this northern eltmnie f..r a peHinl
of sixteen tear*. Ho b pn teiieo then* In- II-
the result Uf the Ureeh e\|M1<lltloll of !*v:
Packages of let tint* ami mdl*h wen* brought
lo the 1 nlteil Htntes i.ml nfi.*r n furtber
perltil of alx years were planted, nml whUel
the lettuce seed lool lost Its vltalltr, fullv
one half of ihe rinlliili gerutlmite«l amt i
grew to maturity and perfection -Phihnlel-
TIIIS DATE IN HISTORY.
JANUARY 10.
1641-Archbishop Jaunt ltehended.
toln
flirt.
Itorn 1
of »*
Hhe Is the i>ppo!
cniumi In* prodb
nilmllesN Thnt. howev
enk tultabilness In the
oalte ilf all thes4>.
' ‘ * H"»b«
Imply
* hn Jjc ta*. Hiv aliagacu-at-Uio *^^4- get
uer be.uiiig* In ttrdlnary e\ei>-4|.iv life
Punning, ealeulatbrn. clavertiets iii»'’ murli
onatrtiit In „„ M
personal selflsh cud III
- stupid na a
la uev#r
re .usual nml
roau. If there !•
view. A worn 11
man can be
I that could trijy be said 1 hut ba« woman im menubig nt all? llaa
However degrnd»*<l 11 mntt may t**>. he D she no geuernl puristae In the scene of the
Immeasurably atawe ihe im*sl superior 1 worbl? Ilns she not a destiny, ami !u splr
woman. »•» much •«» tbal all com|»arIron I »»f ■*" K ““ •• -*—-
and clnsslflcaiboi of the two are Impoaslhle; | tho
but even so io« oae lies nnr right to
ittoineo or defame woman, however Inferior I aivldent t»r nbsunllty?
abe must 1*e e.msblereil j In order to umleratand her meaning It la
A »rue adjustment of the claim* for legnl neceaaary to start from "a phenomenon
eqnalitv can In* undertaken «m m* ether which, though old and well reeognlietl. h
‘talma f*
dertnken on m
than the recognition »»f n »**mpbq
•pae.tt»Ht |**lar »»p|»o*ltb»ii i*f the v**\ev
I trust that 1 may esrape «*tuifualen of
It tv the sup**rbrlal d*
Hiv tlews with the Riim-rtielnl •bwiilne of
|»’ J. \t«M-btus. a doctrine only Interesting
as a brave r»*etlon nealnst the general
tendene*. XYcttieti are not * ph\Biologically
weak minded. ' and I cannot share the \|ew
that worn •*«*na|*lcn»Hi* abllll) are t*»
l»e iegardt«l ns morbid specimen*
From n moral politt vt view i*ne should
Nit Im* glad It* les*ogtilae lu th***e Women
tower received Its pmper nee%l. It |a ?m
tothlng nn*re nor lest than the phenomenon
f t»int«*h milking, fnuu which we may Infer
iioat eorn**tly the real nature «*f woman
Ita analysis shows it to be the force nlib It
brings together amt helps forward t
1e tn tltelr * ‘ * *
>dps them
>f nntrrbtgt
iIhoii nn
r wIiT b
letatjttiding betw
e la poS*«*aMM| b) all Woilteli from tltHr
rllcat 4 lilldhood. tlue vvfjr yonugeat girl*
in nn article entitled "ltnbm>r \|,td.>
from Wheat," William T. Walah. writing
In reference, to thl* tnntter In The Tech
nical Worbl Magazine for Jnnuar
"The Imnortiuo'e «*f the 4lis-.it
sea rmd v l*e overeat I mate I. conditi
line* It! ?> time whl'll. thl! tt.if!.|
Ttvusly flskTitg from where I'* rut tin* *ti
pile* i*f tnldter nre to ci.nte In hnlf
din-mb'. It I* art Id. the annual i‘on*iiiiintli
Of the -1 -»-#!•• ■«>•* I ..in 1 .*.
t
by mnnv as 11 conservnth
nre nlwnya ready to n<‘t n* meswngera fot
their slaters* lover*. Ami If the Instinct of
match tonkin? can l»c Imbilgcd in oulv nfter
the nartlctilnr witman lit qnekfrttu has
brought alsnit her own •**msuuimnitou m
marriage it ts none tho l»*ss present before
that time, nnd the only things which are
at work ngnluat It nre her Jealousy „r per
contem|K»rarles alyl kj*f snxletv nboot th.dr
• hum** wlvfc.TegaftT fa-her lover until nhe
lias Itually M-em-nl him by leassm „f |,<t
money, her s**. Ini p***ltb>u mol w* f.*rth
As soon as wniuen have got tbl ,.f their
own ca04* by their *»wn marring, ib.-v
haaren to h.d(> the son* ami .laughters of
their acquaintances marry. Tie* fn. t that
lder women, tn whom tie* bo. fumin't
ikem Is
bits died oat. nre «u« h 11
fullv recognised that the
spread that they are »he out) teal
.!■ C
|v|.)-4rrcutlnh H Hlaek. t^cretary
In tbichannn's cabinet, Itorn. ••
August IP. 1***
lSln- Pennv Post Introduced In Knglnti I v
Itov.I.ind Hill.
Dll—Mir Hudson lanre, governor of
Helena during Napoieott'a cn|*H'*
tlltul.
M2-Hatnitfl Poll, Inventor of the revolt,
died. Horn July if. IMI.
DTI—Prince Freilerlejt. rharlew^gatn*'' 1 '
DV3 -I ppet suspension bridge nt N •- 1
I nils d«*sttoyed by wind storm
1W-Princess Marie of Killnburgh matt ■"I
to crown prince of ItoaraAnln
IVvWtireat street rnllwny strike In Ih-e*
t Murav leff appoint
[ter of foreign nlfalra
iMvlnte.1 Ru«"
THE
KODAK
HOUSE
Agents Knstiuan Kodaks. FI neat sti! 1
.levHoping and rtnlahlng. t‘oin|Uete * *
K*»d*k -itpplbs for the atiiSteur. M*i
•|.*r de|Hirtui.'ut
A. K. HAWKES CO.
44 WHITEHALL BT.