Newspaper Page Text
AiLAIs'j. A (iivOimiA iv
NEW OECOROS
FOR
FEBRUARY
VICTOR
AND
EDISON
MACHINES
ON SALE
MONDAY
February 28.
Phillips
& CrewCo
37-39 Peachtree St.
SOCIETY WITH
OUR NEIGHBORS
• CAVE SPRING.
Mr. Albert Montgomery, of Bond,
Ml«*.. wu the turn of relative* re*
cently.
After a delightful vlalt to Mlea M. U
Montgomery, Mias Jessie Forbes has
returned to her home In Royaton.
Mr. George Pettis spent Sunday here
with his family.
Miss Blanche Rakestraw, of Birm
ingham. Ala., Is the guest of her moth
er, Mrs. R. b. Rakestraw.
Mr. J. L. Baker, of Anniston. Ala.,
who has been here for a ten days* va
cation, Will return home Monday.—
Miss Georgia Trout has returned
from Rome, where she has been for
the pan week.
Mr. D. C. Stroud Is In Atlanta.
Mrs. Loweee aqd two children, v
Miss Alice Brtbeck, of ('edartown. spent
Wednesday here, the guests,of friends.
Miss Addle Hoge entertained the
tAdlesV^MIsslonaiT Society Wednesday
afternoon.
Mrs. Darden Asbury and little daugh
ter are the guests of the former's moth
er. Mrs. T. W. Asbury.
Miss Beulah Jones and her mother
are In Oxford, Ala., visiting her sister.
Mrs. T. L. Bagley. .
Miss Dycle Sanders, of Vans Valley,
came today to %*lslt friends.
’• Men Watts gave an enjoyable
dance at the new hotel Saturday even
ing. The out-of-town guests were
Merfftrs. Dudley ^McGruder, Deleter Fair-
field, Claire Wyatt. George Watts. C.
Porter and B. Hudgins, Mr. and Mrs.
81ms and Mr. and Mrs. MrColUster.
Misses Camp. Fallon. McClelland and
Bvana will attend the ball In Jack
sonville, Ala.; Friday evening.
Miss Harriet Ides, after a visit to
dre. Charles DuPre, at Marietta, has
•‘turned home.
HUa Cattle R. < Breton of Columbia,
S. C., is visiting friends and relatives
in thQ cltv.
Miss Bertha Adamson, of Bon Air,
Ga., will arrive in a few days to visit
Miss Florence Werner.
Mrs. Frank Hawkins has returned
front New York city.
Mr. Howard Bucknell will return In
few days front Florida.
Dr. K. L. Awtry has returned from
New York city.
Miss Helene Hammond has returned
to Rome, after visiting friends In At
lanta.
Mrs. Alex Ronnyman has returned
from a vlst to her mother. Mrs. Thontus
Berry, at Rome.
Miss J. P. Wingfield, who has been
very III at thq Ballard. Is slightly Im
proved. #
Mrs. Edward Ritter and her grand
daughter, Miss Isabelle Ltebrnan. of
Youngstown. O., are spending the win
ter with the Mieses Franklin. 115 Pul
liam street. Mrs. Ritter Is the sister of
the late Mrs. Max Franklin and her
many friends are giving her a hearty
welcome.
WEST POINT.
Alias Coons, of Indiana, Is the at
tractive guest of Miss Alice Lanier.
Mrs. Mark McCullnh has as her
guest Miss Kdward Whitaker, of Co
lumbus.
Miss Clara Crawford, of New Or
leans, Is spendlhg the week with Miss
Daisy Znrhry.
Miss Maggie Hogg is visiting rela-
TIYes ih Be no la. —
Miss Fay Hhultae. Miss Estelle Hors
ley and Miss Kate Smith have return
ed from Columbus from a house party
given by Miss Verna Dudley.
Mrs. L. W. Arnold has returned to
her home In Atlanta, after a visit to
her mother, Mrs. Lottie Melton.
Miss Jessie Lewis Johnson expects to
leave soon for a visit to friends In
Quitman. Ga.
Mrs. Edna McKemle has returned
from a visit to LaGrange.
Miss Martha Horsley left Wednesday
for a visit to Mrs. R. O. Pharr In La-
Grange.
Mrs. Frank Roland has returned to
her home In Atlanta, after a visit to
relatives here.
Mr Paul Orr, of Atlanta, spent Wed
nesday here.
One of the prettiest entertainments
of the week was the domino party giv
en by Miss Alice Lanier Thursday aft
ernoon In honor of her guest. Miss
Coons.
PURIFICATION OF PRESS
PAPER'S RESPONSIBILITY
TO ITS DAILY READERS
Powerful Sermon on
Cleanliness in News-
WHA 7 OF SELLING HONOR
FOR PIECES OF SILVER
papers.
THE DAILY SEWER;
IT WAS CALLED
Better Paper Die Than
Live by Selling Itself
For Gain.
CAMILLA.
Mr*. O. W. Bacilli, of Ilnlnbrhlge,
rum* mr-m-P-cmW—--Monday.-tnnrnlM
to tie at tho bedside of her fattier. Mr.
Daniel Pslincr, who hn» been very sick.
Mr. Palmer Is nearly 9U years olil anil
has been quite feeble for same time.
Miss Pearl Williams, after making
a pleasant visit to her parents, Mr.
ami Mrs. J. J. Williams, at Ashhurn,
has resumeil her duties In the postofllce
here.
Mrs. RoyCorhrnn has returned front
visit to relatives In Jacksonville,
D id TOD *T,r batons to one of the
"lyceuma" or drhatinc societies
which met In "the little red
•chool house?'.* Well, If you haven't,
you have misled hair your life: you
have loet somethin# that you will never
be able to make up thli aide the Oreat
Exodus. But If you have, then you
will remember that every nason you
wrestled In mighty debate to decide the
relative potency of the pen and the
sword, end that other question of stilt
more Immediate and of far graver im
port, whose final answer should fix the
relative place and power In society of
the pulpit and the press. Sometimes II
was decided one way and sometimes
the eloquence and logic of the con
testants won the answer for the op
posite side, and next year the ques
tion was Just as fresh and as unable
ns ever.
..The unceasing march of'events' and
-But what shall we say of the dally feeders of the pdbife craving for
Information who have so far forgotten their moral uhllgntldn as to prove
tnmortu that high Ideal which gave them, .birth:' What shall we say
of the publishers, who Judas-IIke.
have sold their honor for a few peltry
pieces of stiver" Whet about the
o-per which is not »v. n content to
be an honorable, useful, respectable
and self respecting sewer, aiding so
ciety, through unpleasant publicity,
to lid Itaelf of that which Is danger
ous and offensive, but which Insists
upon becoming a veritable moral
cess-pool, actually aiding by Its pub
licity furnished for a price, moral
pestilences which has a continual of.
fens* and menace to anclety? If an
avll la hard to endure la Its pass
ing, then It Is an unforgivable of
fense to anv community that pro
vision should be made for Us con
tinuance. Becauee a gfeat newspa
per baa Offered Itself lo the public ae
a purveyor of publicity It does not
necessarily follow that It must sell
Its columns to those .who .live by the
shame and disease end death, or their
fellow men. There are some occupa
tions which ere technically legal, but
which are morally llteguimate. and
It la certainly within the province of
the publisher of a dally newspaper to
decide whether Its Influence shall be
sold to Increase the pros partly of
any business whose prosperity means
the poverty of the community. The
argument •■> often offered ae an ex
cuse tor this moral treachery that the paper cannot live without all of the
advertising which It can possibly secure, la without moral weight even It
Its statement be true, for there Is no actual necessity that a paper of this
REV. E. D. ELLENWOOD.
type should live. Its death would eerve society far better."
Kleht luonthe BraMwey Ttaek
< tilcsgo. Twenty-one miutcel number,. A whirls
grist automobile rsre etfeet. Two tylug ears, m
GREAT CHORUS OF PRETTY GIRLS.
Nlgbt Sc to tl.tO. Ustloee Se to 11.00. mis not
WEDNESDAY AND THURSDAY NIOHTB—JANUARY M AND 11.
JOSEPH BROOKS PRESENTS
LILLIAN RUSSELL
IN TUB NEW COMEDY.
THE BUTTERFLY
•all* I
ILK i
lIAMliERA.
ees JQc Id fl lO. fatF opm l
h# really desire* a aernior., at III he
'need go no farther than his easy chair
the development of what
pleased to call civilisation forces un
answer to many of our old-time ques- ,
tlons It Is aulte oosslble that the relit l»tdl««tu«l food t»»in the discourse he
uons. it is quite posaime mat tne rent- ... . liro | 111 . 1 | mv hear In the
fortlng knowledge that the collection
plate will not Intrude upon his diver
sion or his meditation. And. If he is
a i»oor man, he probably knows by per
sonal fll|icrlrnrr-that—♦fto-Hisnmin h. %
will find In the paper Is a better one.
furnishing more actual spiritual an 1
haa suffered no change, hut It Is cer
tain that In the relative apheres of their
influence a change haa token place.
And shall we deny that the power of
any Influence is vastly Increased by the
extension of Its territory? Time whs
when the preacher was the central
figure of the community and the pulpit
was tfoe nucleus of every new civilisa
tion which pushed further back the
borders of savagery. The man of Ood
opened not only the way to Spiritual
culture and enlightenment, but also
IjtWU'Clual^ preachers must forthwith become edi
tors or printers. Home men will un-
Fla.
Rev. J. J. Rennctt and family, of At
lanta. arrived In Camilla a few dnys
ago and will remain here for two or
three months.
Miss .Maud McRae returned Hunday
from McRae, where she visited rela
tives.
Miss Maggie Burnett, of Sale City,
lilted her sister, Mrs. C. A. Role*, here
recently.
Miss Clare Culpepper spent Hunday
with her friend. Miss Fannie Clark, In
Ochlocknee.
Mrs. Charles E. Thomas, of Hpring-
fleld, O., is the guest of her mother.
Mrs. Sarah Lamed, at the Aragon.
Mrs. John McQueen, of Birmingham
arrived In the city Saturday at noon
and Is the guest for several days of her
uncle, .Mr. Rldney H. Phelan, lit his
home, on Peachtree street.
Is visiting relatives
Dr. and Mrs. Marlon T Benson hav
moved Into their new home, 600 Pled
tnont avenue.
•Mrs. V. G. (Irens Is spending the
winter In California with her brother,
Mr. Nelson.
Mrs. Thompson French with bet
ter. Mrs. Miller, of Kentucky, w ill Join
the Gates party on their trip to Mexlc
Mlsa Kltna Westmoreland left Hat
_urday for Baltimore, where she goea
to visit .Mrs. Kllard.
.Mrs. J. W. Pope will return from
STAY AT HOME
AND ORDER YOUR DRUBS.
We offer you the many ad
vintage* of rellslde.
sponafbltv
prompt, free di
ll very. Whatever you want
from s drug store rati be
■n«l without expdtnee to
vnurself. We All prescrip
tlons with trustworthy ac
curacy over the phone and
deliver them as promptly
ss conscientious work
therein permits.
WATSON S PICKARD,
Proprietors
GRAND PHARMACY.
TO MRS. MARSHALL.
Mrs. Albert Thornton gave n pretty
luncheon Friday In honor of Mrs. Wil
liam Marshall, of Staten Island.
The table was covered with a lace
cloth and had a centerpiece of nar
cissi and ferns. The candlesticks had
white and sliver shades ftfid the bon
bons and Ices were In white and green.
Mrs. Thcrtwton wore a white voile
gown, fashioned with lace, and Mrs.
Marshall waa gowned In cream lace,
made over taffeta.
The partv Included: Mrs. Wlltner
Moore, .Mrs. F. 8. Kills. Mrs. Robert .1
Lowry. .Mrs. Carroll Payne, Mrs. Kren.4,
Mrs. John D. Little. Mrs. Elkin. Mrs.
rsas/axul after him led the eager plon
eers. He was the moral monitor and
the mental niolder of the men and
women to whose leadership he was
committed. He threatened them with
the wrath of an offended God and also
declared that ignorance provided no
safeguard. Therefore, for hts instruc
tion rather than for his Inspiration,
men eagerly sought Yltm and attended
with care upon bin every utterance.
The fUseonslbility of ths Public Press.
In those old dnys a dally paper was
a novelty and a luxury. It was not for
the masses. The priest and the pastor
must still Im* their Instructors. What
ever of good or of III might happen
on the other side of the world could
not ho known by the men whose blood
(lows ,:n our velna until weeks and
months hud slipped away and the sor
row or the mural of it nil was some
what softened by time's healing touch.
But today -we "put a girdle round the
earth In forty minutes," and read the
thoughts of our fellows In distant lands
strained to attend because of the aris
tocracy of apparel which we havr
lowed to come upon ua as n curse.
All*of thlM Is not here offered either
In support or In criticism of the Hun
day paper as an Institution, but mere
ly to express the conviction that the
sphere of Influence of tho dally pap-'r
has become much greater than that of
the pulpit as an educator for that largn
majority of men whom the sociologist
Is pleased to refer to ds "the iposses."
Which does not mean that the church
has lost Its function and that all of the
doubtedly still prefer to go to rhurch
and others will still desire to be repre
sented there by their wives. And then*,
as well ah the others, will continue to
rend the dally paper. And the preach
er. too. must manage to find thwtfm# to
read his dally If he would hope to min
ister most acceptably to men and woiii-
rtnlty hemming more and
more convinced that the renter of their
religious life la w herever and whenever
their own souls struggle for the perfec
tion of righteousness, and not upon th?
sea-w«shed shores of Eastern Asia at
the beginning of the present epoch of
the world's civilisation.
The responsibility of the public press
grows with the world's Increasing us*»
of ll. The percentage of illiteracy
among the Inhabitants of the earth was
never so small as It Is today. Every
lllage which can posslnly support on*:
as Its dally paper and It reaches the
minds and tnorAls
but whether It Is new and whsther It
will “go." This practice should havs
no place in the policy of any publica
tion wrhlch asks for the patronage of
men and women who work am! pray
for an enduring civilisation. In all the
economy of .God there le no place for
* He. It Is as much an evidence of
fmbeclTm~nntr tH»meis as It
S ravlty, for there Is always a suf-
clency of happenings to record that
are strange and new as well as true.
Commereialised Newspapers.
But what ahall we say of the dally
feeders of the public craving for In
formation who have so far forgotten
their moral obligation as to prove tral
tor to that high Ideal which gave them
birth? What shall we say of the pub
lishers, who, Judas like, have sold their
honor for a few paltry pieces of allver
What about the paper which Is not
oven content to be an honorable, use
ful, respectable and self-respecting
sewer, aiding society, through unpleas
ant publicity, to_rid herself of that
which Is dangerous and ofTenstve, but
which Insists upon becoming a vertta
bio moral cess-pool, actually aiding
by Its publicity furnished for a price,
moral pestilences which are a con
tinual offense and menace to eoclety?
If an evil in Jiard to endure In tta pass
ing, then It Is an unforgivable offum*
to any community that provision
should be made for Its continuance.
Because a great newspaper has offered
Itself to the public oh a purveyor of
publicity it does not necessarily follow
that It must sell Its columns to those
who live by the shame and disease end
death of their fellow-men. There are
some occupations which are technically
legal, but which are morally Illegiti
mate ami It Is certainly within the
province of the publisher of a dally
newsftaper to decide whether Its In
fluence shall be sold to Increase the
pro*|M>rlty of any business whose pros
perity means the* poverty of the coin
while still they pulsate with the life off In seven and for half nil hour of that
the souls which gave them birth. The day. but every day of the week, and for
them .
facilities for the Immediate transfer of n* much time tin they feel Inclined
the records of happenings have been' spare from their recreation or thel
so nerfected and cheapened that the j sleep.
day's history of the world Is left at our; “The Daily 8awar."
door for a penny. ® v ’*nlng a man , And |, ow often we are compelled t<
!’?Ilt. C .nd*yoJ , .r<l f may'ftn'our'minds ,h / unlmppv conclusion tlml this sense
with the greweome details of this latcsl |"t responsibility to tho public rests but
moral anachronism na we flip our coffee lightly ui»on the hearts of the men
tomorrow morning. i whom we appoint to gather and sort
Til****° f ou * *>>' w h(U f or y., the news of the world! 8o fre-
It feeds upon, and we have rushed . ... , .
madly after the Athenians, determined - ( l UPnt flagrant misuse of opor
to be Informed regarding the very I tuntty and so disgustingly apparent
latest thlng._ The % thirst for news Is‘the prostitution of the Ideal that It I*
no wonder that one of our most french
man Harris.
Birmingham next week.
Miss Jennie Evans lyis
Greensboro after a brief
lanta.
Miss Mary Jim Dunlap has returned
from an extended visit to the .Misses
Jarnlgun. at Qreensboro.
Mrs. J. W. Manyhsm. Mr. and Mrs.
Joe Boyd and Mr. and Mrs. J. J. Many-
ham, of Grllfln, attended the perform
ance of "Mile. .Modiste" at the Grand
on Friday night.
Mrs. Mitchell Horner, who has been
quite III for the past week. Is some
what better.
Mrs. J. T. Fort Is the guest of .Mrs.
H. C. White, In Athena.
The Mtsaes Carr have returned to
their home at Covington after a visit
friends In Atlanta.
.Mr. N. F. Jackson has returned from
short business trip.
Miss .Moggie Bush Is the guest of
Colonel and Mrs. A. D. .Meador, at
Covington.
Mrs. Htanley 8. Crittenden, after a
short visit to her nieces. Mrs. Palmer
Phelan (Marks and the Misses Phelan,
returned Saturday to her home at
Montgomery*
Insatiable. The chief concern Is no
longer the progress of the Individual or
even of the community, but the accu
rate knowledge of the doings of the
world. Our active Interest In the story
of the patriarchs Is not so great a* our
desire to know all about the very latest
aspirant for political or ecclesiastical
honors. Even the story of Jesus must
wait while we give our attention to the
man who has a new theory regarding
his advent upon the earth.
Fleeing from on apparent fear of the
commonplace and terror of the trite wv
hnvo gone news mad. Tho dally news
paper 1s no longer a luxury; It has be
come a necessity. A man may be too
poor to own a good Bible a rellabl
history, n set
hut he Is never too poor
dally paper. He reason* that he might
as well be out of the world as out of
touch with It and without Immediate
knowledge of Its happenings.
The Sunday Paper.
On Hunday he finds It entirely un
necessary to go to church, for lo! the
church has come to him. The Hunday
paper contains more than he can read
and more than he can possibly thlna
about, and there Is reudlng to suit any
mood which may l>o hi* If he attend.*
church It Im more than likely that the
ant modern philosophers has dubbed 1
the dally paper .the "Dally Sewer." Yet
I cannot agree that the appellation Is
wisely chosen, for It Is not wholly de
scriptive of the class of publications to
which this writer has reference. The
sewer Is a beneficent, an absolutely In
dispensable agent In society, and
the dally pu|»er would always do
duty with a* complete a sense of It
great responsibility the morals of the
community would always be cleaner,
safer and saner. Unless n man be ab
solutely blinded by fanaticism and
prudery he must be able to recognl
n, not one dnv | munltv. The fffgurnetU so often offer
ed as an excuse for this moral treach
ery that the paper can not live without
all of the advertising which tt can pos.
albly secure, Is without moral weight
even If Its statement be true, for there
Is no actual necessity that a paper of
this type should live. Its death would
serve society far better.
What Can We Do About It?
Doubtless every normal man would
choose that the dally papers which
come Into his home should be of high
moral tone, free from all obscene ad
vertising and sensationally Inflamed
news mutter and ’ whoso editorials
should be marked by dignity, scholar
ship and moderation. Then why not
ask for what you want and insist upon
having tt? And when you have found
It. when you have found a dally news-
clflca-
nay a
good word for it whenever you can.
The world looks forward to that golden
age when public educators will not
have to be hired to be decent, to teach
T I. Im — ..> ..M.l ft.. .... ■
Friday and Saturday, Matinee Saturday, February 2.
ROGERS BROS
IN IRELAND
THE
THE ORIGINAL CAST AND PRODUCTION
fills AND MAX ROGERS AND ONE HUNDRED OTHERS
mini i I NEXT week
oivvv 1 MitiimTwfar. Thrifty III Stole
RAMBEY MORRIS' RURAL MASTBEPlECB,
THE NINETY AND NINE
Dtmt from It. —food New York run. Bp«ll4 cut. Eltbont. production.
M.rrelou. Benin rtWcu, Including Tho FI I flit of . Locomatlr. Through * Prut*
Fire. One of tut .Cion’, gretret .ucc.ura.
Mrs. Jas. Coates, Wife
■ of Wealthy Englishman
“f MMtonor Ltumn " mt ,n "cording of tho happening,
■rr t » t Sl lU.' " f «" ""Perfect world ..f Imperfect
er too poor to olTortl hi. I murh , ium bo folded which do—
truth In preference to error and to pu
rlfy rather than to degrade the Ideal*
of men. When that time comes pub
lishers will give to the world what they
feel the world to stand In need of rath
er than what the world may think It
wants and may be willing to (my for.
But. so long aa the appeal for a purl
fled press must be mode by way of the
not make acceptable reading for the pocketbuok nerve, then let th»* oppeul
drawing room or the nursery. A pub- u compelling one. If you don t like
Ucatlon which announces itself to Ik* wade through a lot of filthy adver
ts certainly not to Ih* tlslng to reach the news Item that you
censured If it publishes the accounts of need. If you are tired of sensational
things that happen, even though headlines and anarchistic editorials,
these happening* Bleak the moral then say so In tones of silver that will
sense of the reader. Hut that newspa^! reach all the way from the cashier s
per Is certainly to be severely censured • desk to the editor’s sanctum. And your
If It forgets that along with the guilt* j appeal will be heard and heeded
This picture ahows Mra. James
routes, who waa Mrs. Jack WIN
menllng. daughter of Colonel Van
derbilt Allen and granddaughter
of Commodore Vanderbilt. Her
latest husband la a wealthy Eng
lishman.
iqmn the friendly compart mads beta
(linn, the white men resumed their digging
In single
rlldfer-
erlng and the dispensing of ne
certain and very definite moral obliga
tion to the community must be dis
charged. There Is more than one way
of telling news. The psychologlrul ef-
mtnlster will endeavor to Inspire him j feet of the entirely unnecessary rela
te action In some needed path of right-Itlon of the revolting details *>f every
•ouaneea, so he prefer* to remain quiet- crime must not be underestimated
ly at home and reau the records o*| Editor* and publisher* «»w
what other men have l>een doing nUfmairtty to remember that th«lr pro- f .. . .. .
over the world. If It should chance that jductlon* are read by all sorts and r«n..
dltlons of men. Scientists declare
us their conviction that ninny of the
GREAT RED MEN.
I.—MuRBIlHoit.
By REV. THOMAH B. OREGORY.
" nri -
.m-
OOOOOOOOOOOOOOOOOOtM
ALABASTINE
Wo have . largo .utility
on hand in moot tho heavy
demand tor till, ooaxnii.
Dealer. Mill t>lea«o put In
tlMlr ardor, early.
GEORGIA PAINT AND
GLASS GO,,
Distributors.
ATLANTA.
0900000000OOOOOOOOOQ
That there have been great men among
itlami no one who hsii can
III deny.
Among t)ie children of the forest there
ere Mini" mighty spirits, great In iintlte
moral defections which cause ihe'Wrld I *» parage, great In ei
to shudder are the direct results «f i eeutlre nldllty, and. better still, great In
the reading of detAlls of another crime *the elements of moral Integrity,
of a similar nature. It may be neces- I The rtrst Indians that the New EuglnnH
O 1 sary for public safety that the com-I settlers rnnn* In contact with were the
0 | munlty should know that a man was I Mninp.in<>ag». whose hunting ground* Isy
g I murdered by his comrade <»r by a par- || M >t«feii Nnrrsgsnsett and Cop© Cod bays.
X j son unknown, at a certain place, but The head sachem of the WumpaDoog* In
n the newspaper does not best discharge ujo was Mssaas«dt. s mao whose heart
O Its obligation to society when It un- , was as white and soul ns noble as tboac
8 necessarily described the perpetration <>f »u^ white
of the crime with an elaborate sketch
g of the Ineartwn and a tmmn to show ...
X j where the mangled corpse was found 1 ,i!7»?• elf «
j Then the maker* of new spnper* U tilt** |nnk>I>
O 1 should remember that they owe It to and good s
0 I their reader* to tell the truth. Not al* le rned. Governor Itrndford treated the "ssv
St I w»ye to " expedient that all nf the "" « ">■>"" ", . , ; r '.’ ,h L r '.Y P"!!"
X I truth .Imuld to* tidd. but In the imme ! "‘“i?,,?" In/l* retire
5 K ««! «nd humanity let ell the, I. SgJ'.'.^e .Ml def?,Si?e illTUIlreX
6 told be the truth! In too many news- •King" Massanoit mid King James.
O (paper offices the test of the merit **f a After smoking the pipe of peace and as-
"storv" Is not whether or not It Is true, changing the heartiest of congratulations
For n half century that compart waa as-
credly kept on ls»th atdea. The whlta men
were faithful to their promises, aud, fnliv
appreciating honesty and fair dealing,
sssolt remained trus to hit aolamn agree'
“lent.
This "savage" chief moat haea bean aa
Uplomstle as lie was ttanch, aa wlae aa
he was giNsI nml true, to have held bis wild
Itsrlmrlans fnst to that treaty for fifty
_b.ii.
years! It was n tremendous task, hut he
did It. Not upce did the forest king swerve
ala
\GRAND ,
MATINEE TODAY—TONIOHT.
Mr. Edward R. Salter Prtnont.
CHAftLSI J . STINE
mi OKIVI IVANS.
In Edgar Ealwyn'i Merry Faroe.
ITS ALL YOUR FAULT”
Me to 11.II. Matinee: St
Night:
to 11.00.
™ BIJOU
TONIGHT—MATINEE TODAY.
CBAB. E. PLANET'S OREAT SUCCESS.
ACROSS
PACIFIC
THE NINT5TYAJTD JUKI.
fee. to him or ink hte edrlea.
Th.ro le BotktBi more onpteOetat thee
to latlmaey, which ntlly I. aec aa l.tt-
■aocy it all, between two peraooo who ho-
litre they are lutlOed to lodging nod aett-
irlalag Met, other tod express tMr opto-
to* of thing! which do not coaoora them
at all. This I. why brothers- ud Saae
fall oat Tboy belter# they hero the right
to bo open mouthed and outapakw towud
to mpect aach ethee*.
fire brother to walk la: and whan the hour
hi which he heard the "Oreat Mplrlt"
t him to the "happy hunthii ***
old detMirt knowing that
ninn
as nti
Ills word.
"Then* Is no
Indian," We U*n
ire saying It yet
to any that he had limkeu
story of Mai
. „ ... ... _Jaernh!e saying.
The grand old chief was a savage only In
Ills heart was tender amf true;' his
luanhtMtd was heart of oak.
‘A BIT OF ADVICE.”
urh other, tod Mt
lodlrldualltlee. AM (till It I. Tory eHm,
•o that children of tho asms parents hare
Dot one thought Is common, to such an
extent that nn toon a, they stop apetklw
of thatr childhood memories they de aet
know what to say.
Kren a mother, whose children an Inde
pendent and of mtrked Individuality, must
bo rery careful ud na* groat tact, nod
ranet oarer forget that her children bow
are respoMiblt tbetneelre* and no looser
are like chickens gathered under the pro
tecting wings of the hen.
To giro another perera "a plac* of yaar
whan yea thlok oeenkloa demand. It
le entirely out of phico and Marly always
makes matters worse, antes the other
l»rty te poeaeehed of tttperhutn.n patience.
If you were always patient, thro all yaar
rrlrnda would know that yon understood
them, area without a word of siplauttas.
that they might always appeal to yooc
kind, rbarllama heart.
Keep your Mart open, and ha always
frank with yoaraelfjoat let .11 others
walk their owr — —
choose without
not show
make th._
and nneharltahla
Impatience. .
Whit you roll "frank and sincere” might
oftrn more lastly be deelgnattd at “ua-
called far and Uetleaa."
t yoararlf, hot let all others
own paths, which they must
boot your aesl.uncv. Too ran
low them or teach them: yea ctn not
them better by aa aamandiy, falsa
incharlUbl* ward, apoktn Is anger or
By CARMEN 8YI.VA.
(Queen Elltnbeth of Koumanla.)
ATLANTA PATTERN MF6. CO.
The IMIgriins lin«l l*H*n upon the Now Kng
IHilntiNr warriors. m*«le n visit to the
1th overture* of klmliiess
Kortuiiutely for nil con-
He fmuk with yourself! That Is oft#*
much more difficult than to be so with
others: hut do not my things whleti are
so pslnful, to bnnl tlmt no grsas grows
where your fl*it steps, no flower blootna
where your hand touches.
it have no Mm how terribly painful la
your flunk ness, your outspokenness. Like
n red hot Imu your words slug# sad sear,
nnd often the party whom you address la
not even able to answer.
Human emotions, aet Ions and affaire are
so eouiplb'stcd. to obscure, that yon ran
never fathom them, not even In tfc#
of your deal cat, most Intliaata friend.
Friendship often becomsa a burden, hr Bins*
the friend thinks b# Is Justlflsd In speak
lug of and criticising things which you
hnnily dare coufeos to your own brert and
conscience, and a friend Is ovon ant to feel
hurt because you do notiapeak to hire, cog-
MASTER PATTERN MAKERS
and workman In allied llnoe. Pre
liminary work for Inventors.
MODELS, DESIGNING.
44 Courilnnd St. Sell Phene 2077.