Newspaper Page Text
EDUCATIONAL
MEET NOTABLE
Educators of National Prominence
Deliver Addresses at
Charleston Meeting.
Gainesville, Ga.. Jan. 10—Dr. 11.
.1. Pearce. P. 11. !>., president of
Brenau College Uohservatory. has giv
en out the following interview, rela
tive to the recent Educational meeting
at Charleston, S. C.:
“The recent meeting of the Sou
thern Educational Association at
Charlotte, N. C.. was in some re
spects the most notable that has
ever been held. In attendance it was
perhaps the largest, unless the Atlan
ta meeting excepted.
“In addition to most of the lead
ers in educational activity throughout
the south, the association was honor
ed by the presence of two educators
of national prominence, President
Emeritus Charles W. Elliott, of Har
vard, and President Harry Pratt Jud
son, of Chicago.
“President Judson delivered a very
inspiring address, showing the rela
tion of education to scientific progress,
which was full of comfort for those
of us who believe m the ultimate com
plete triumph of man over the forces
of nature.
I was greatly impressed by Presi
dent Elliott, who deserves the title
of Nestor of American educators
Elliott has a really remarkable per
sonality. I was at first startled and i
even shocked by the horrible birth
mark which disfigures almost half of
his face. But his wonderful poise
and apparent self-mastery, together
with his elegant diction and vivacious
ideas, quickly overcame the feeling.
“Elliott is also an optimist and
the most striking feature of the ex
tempore address, which I heard him
■ ' 'deTiver. was his defense of the Ameri-
can business men against the charge
of being money lovers, and his de
claration that the really typical
American man of wealth regards his
money as a public trust.
I did not hear the address which
Dr. Elliott delivered on Thursday
night, which was bis principal address.
I am informed, however, that it was
somewhat disappointing to his audi
ence on account of the length of
time consumed in a discussion of ne
gro education. Southern people are
greatly concerned about education in
| Let An Argus Ad ,1
> Work For You kJ
“The constant drop of water VW
Wears away the hardest stone; 1 i
The constant gnaw of Towser V
Masticates the hardest bone; B
■ The constant, ardent lover, ■
, ■ Wins the blushing maid, B
And the constant advertiser V*
Is the one who wins the trade,”
apw ar
VW —*— '■ i U
f THE DALTON ARGUS f
V NO. NINE KING STREE" M
I / I
! general and they are not careless
about the education of netrroes. They
have given the negro far more than
bis proportionate share of the public
money and they have been willing for
the people of the north to pay out
! their millions for the negro colleges
j while the white colleges have strug-
Igled on in poverty. But they are not
i ready to receive very enthusiastically
l instruction from our northern friends
•upon the problem of negro education.
' The average Southerner thinks he has
i inside information on that subject
himself.
Among the Southern educators who
had place on the program perhaps
the most notable was Chancellor J.
H. Kirkland, of Vanderbuilt Univer
sity. His estimate of the financial
necessities of a college was somewhat
discouraging to men who are engag
ed in college work, especially in the
small colleges. Nothing less than a
million dollars in bindings. equipment,
and endowment will be adequate for
the needs of an up-to-date college,
according to Dr. Kirkland. The doc
tor left our Georgia educators at least
in a very hopeless frame of mind, as
tie offered absolutely no suggestion
as to how such a sum might be se
cured, and I believe none of our Geor
gia institutions can meet his require
ments, and 1 fear, not by even half.
Os course the real work of the as
sociation is done in the department
meetings, which are held each after
noon and hi which small groups of
educators discuss more or less inti
mately the lines of work in which they
are interested. My time of course,
was spent in my own department of
Child study, in which we had some
very profitable discussions.
»••»»********
|* SOCIETY AND PERSONAL. ♦
• ••••••«••*••
John W. Crawford is confined to
his room on School street seriously
ill with pneumonia fever.
* • •
J. D. Stroup is confined to his
room threatened with fever.
• • •
Mr. and Mrs. J. B. Brown were in
from Walnut Grove farm Monday.
• • •
Airs. Loveman and daughter, Mrs.
L. 11. Crawford, will leave Wednes
day for a three months stay with rel
atives at Birmingham and Tuscaloosa,
Alabama.
• • •
Eastern Star Meeting.
The Easterin Star will hold its reg
ular meeting Tuesday night, Jan. 11,
and will install officers. A full at
tendance is requested.
MRS. JENNIE L. NEWMAN.
INTERESTING 1 Oil] NEWSPAPER
GIVES CIVIL WAR NEWS
Paper Was Published While Battles in and Around
Dalton Were Being Fought by Johnston and
Sherman in The Year of 1864.
1
“The enemy whipped back at every
point at Dalton, and 84 officers cap
tured,’’ is the chief news in a
copy of the Atlanta Daily Intelli
gencer of May 11. 1864, unearthed
I Thursday by Hon. G. B. Holder, says
, the Rome Tribune.
Mr. Holder spent a part of the
rainy day looking over the ■ ancient
paper and contrasting <thos| times
with these. It was published while
the battles around Dalton between
Sherman and Johnston werq being
fought and while Rome itself was
trembling each hour for fear destruc
tion might be its lot at the hands of
Sherman.
The sheet is a queer one. In all
its four pages there is hardly a word
that does not refer to the great con
flict then in progress. Even the ad
vertisements bear the note of strife.
Hardly a line of news is published
about Atlanta itself, but all about
what the armies are doing at the
front.
A glance at the schedule of prices
charged by the paper would make
a modern newspaper man wish those
days were his, except for the depre
ciated value of paper money in those
days. The Intelligencer says it will
not accept subsari pH ions or adver
tisements for a longer period than
three months “owing to prevailing
conditions.’’ For three months sub
scription to the daily, the price was
sls, and for an advertisement meas
uring one inch, the charge per month
was S4O.
PRODUCE MARKET.
Butter, per pound 20
Eggs, per dozen 30
Hens 35
Fries 15 to 25
Apples SLOO
Dried Apples 6
Birds 10
Rabbits 8
Squirrels 8
Wool.
Washed .... 30
Unwashed 16 to IS
TV.-toes.
Irish Potatoes 75
THi: DAITT
The only place where Rome breaks
into the columns of that issue of the
great Atlanta daily is an advertise
ment in which a gentleman offers SSO
reward for the return of a hog and
three pigs that have “strayed off and
are headed toward Rome.’’
One writer in the paper dares to
interpret a portion of Scripture as
prophecying that the South would
conquer the North by September 1,
1864.
A perusal of the advertising col
umns of the issue demonstrates that
even in those hard days quackery
was not a lost art. One Dr. Ford,
I advertised that he was conducting a
sanitarium near Atlanta whore he
“positively cured cancer.’’
A personal interview was published
in the paper from a man who had
just before inspected the Confederate
prison at Andersonville. He found
it in “pretty bad shape, but not so
bad,’’ and the number of deaths
among the yankee prisoners as about
18 per day. Colonel Parsons was in
command at the time and was de
scribed as doing everything possible
to alleviate the suffering of his pris
oners.
W. J. Clark, of Calhoun, in this is
sue, advertised for his negro slave
“Sip’’ who had run away from him.
He was willing to pay a reward of
SIOO for his return.
Jared I. Whittaker was the pub
lisher of the paper at that time, and
taken altogether it is a most inter
esting sheet.
IS THERE NO REMEDY
FOR THE POOR GROCERYMAN ?
There is a move on foot, starting
up all over the country whereby the
toiling merchant or groeeryman can
be protected from losing so many ac
counts that is so frequent the case
in our own city of late years. They
have called the merchants together
in several towns to organize some kind
of protection from which some kind
of organization can be reached.
We have an epidemic of this kind
in all towns as well as Dalton or the
ball would be started here. Parties
giving their groeeryman the grand
bounce do it honestly. They spend
too much time waiting for a job to
come after them, till their bill gets
so big they are not able to pay it. and
they will try a new firm and he bites
till he swallows the hook and can't
get Iqose without losing a sum and
after he sues he has lost his goods
and labor of delivering them, he
drops his customer to taste of some
other groceryman's stuff. That cus
tomer is all right. He is honest and
don't abuse the merchant for cutting
him off; he says: “I can trade some
where else.
Although the merchant fails to give
him a receipt in full of account to
date and signing his name to it.
In these progressive days and as
much demand as there is for labor
in this town, why should the poor
groceryman or merchant that sets
himself up to furnish or supply
the consumer and make himself an
honest living for his labor and invest
ment. loose these bills. It is because
his customer is honest and promises
to pay this bill on Saturday night and
fails to come around.
Now is there no way whereby this
problem could be solved and be some
guide to prevent.a part or all of this
kind ot living off of the working
groeeryman. One thing we see that
brings a part of it is pride on the
part of the families that wear sl2
and SIS skirts, where others that pay
their grocery bills wear from $.3 to
$6 skirt. Boys if I get beat out of
a hundred or two dollars don't you
swollow the same dose, and see if you
cannot get together and help one ano
ther instead of trying to catch your
neighbor's honest customer.
It there is any remedy let’s hear
from you.
JOHN 11. BURNES.
COTTON CROP
OFE 3.000,000
Government Report Shows 9,646-
186 Bales for 1909 Against
12,465,298 in 1908.
Washington. D. C., Jan. 10 —Gov-
ernment reports show 9,646,285 bales
of cotton, counting round bales as
half bales, ginned from growth of
1909 to January 1, 1910. compared
with 1*5.465.298 of crop of 1908; 9,-
951,505 for 1907 and 11.741.639 for
1906.
HOOKWORM GATHERING
WltL ATTRACT MAH
Prominent Men From All Over the
Country Will Attend Meeting in
Atlanta January 18 and 19.
Atlanta. Ga., Jan. 10 —Preparations
have been practically completed for
'the hook worm conference which will
take place in Atlanta January 18
and 19, under the auspices of the
chamber of commerce, and to which
the mayors, presidents of boards of
trade, leading physicians ami other
interested citizens of all principal ci
ties and towns of the southern states
have been cordially invited.
Special railroad rates have been
offered over all lines and the atten
dance will be large. Many delegates
will “kill two birds with one stone’’
and come prepared to attend the hook
worm conference and the meeting of
the anti-tuberculosis league, which
meets about the same time. j
President C. R. Porter, >f the State
Mutual Life insurance company, of’
Rome, in speaking of the coming book
worm conference, says:
“We have been working in a quiet
way for sometime on this matter. Os
course it is not a question of philan
throphy, but of business with us. We
are deeply interested in any movement
that will raise the standard of health
and efficiency in the south, where our
policy-holders reside. I think that
for the protection of our policy-hold
ers it is our duty to aid every propo
sition that promises better health con
ditions. We will be represented at
the Atlanta conference through our
medical department.”
Dr. Charles W. Stiles, the famous
United States government expert, who
discovered the American hook-worm,
will be present and will deliver lect
ures; members of the Rockefeller com
mission, appointed by the Standard
oil king, to superintend the spending
of the $1,000,000 he subscribed for
the eradication of the curse, will also
be present and take prominent part
in the discussion.
The Alabama Medical association
alone has named 140 delegates, most
of whom will attend. That the event
will be one of national interest is al
ready assured, for representatives
from, the medical boards of practical
ly every southern state, as well as
from ,the principal life insurance
companies, will participate in the
campaign which will be inaugerated
here.
$5.00 REWARD
Will be paid for the return of a lost
ladies’ ring, opal surrounded by bril
liants. Leave at Argus office.
A good time to stop talking is just
before you have told all that yon
know.
One Way xo Appear Vcung.
A wise young woman gi <>> a < he
reason for having learned the v t . n
writin : “T1 is form of « ;
bee.-, used for bur a few VPa ..
write to anybody they are very a->t
com-ludA from my handwriting "Co
have been out of school bur" a fev
yeats. an-; accordingly I wili eousm
ered a real young woman.
"’t his does not count for so much a
present, for I am only 23 years but i
may count a great deal in g. 'tir.y,
a start in the friendship of a
later, i will no i of course lie about \ '
»" I vui „ ~ crj . v
INN SHOWROOMS.
They Were the Forerunners of tj,.
Public Museums.
The genesis of the public mu
j seum was the “raree show” attach
>ed to an inn. Such show- were
j very common as early as the six
i teenth century. From being
resort of all classes the inn becaiffl
; the natural receptacle for everw
thing fid world, out of the wav or
curious, ranging from flint imple
ments and Roman coins turned up
by the plow to stuffed freaks of the
animal kingdom. The public house
museum is still with us. The Bell
and Mackerel, in the Mile End road,
contains a fine museum of 20,000
natural history specimens, original
ly founded by the East London
Entomological society. The Hole
In the Hall, in Borough High
street, possesses many strange
freaks. At the Spaniards, Jack
Straw’s Castle and the Vale of
Health, all on or near Hampstead
Heath, are preserved relics of high
waymen and other local curiojk
Only a few weeks ago the musei«l|
of the Edinburgh Castle, near Rf-J
gent’s park, containing valuable
relics of Oliver Cromwell, Nelson
and Stanley and three great auk’s
eggs, was dispersed by auction.
The first persons scientifically to
exploit this taste were those bold
travelers and indefatigable collect
ors the Tradescants, father and
son, who between the years 1620
and 1662 ran the first public mu
seum and botanic garden at their
residence in South Lambeth. Co
pious references to their wonderful
“closet of curiosities,” also known
as the “Ark,” are found in the
works of Izaak Walton, Evelyn,
etc. The catalogue prepared by the
curator, Elias Ashmole, in 1656
testifies to its containing a superb
collection of coins and warlike in
struments. Its great treasure, how
ever, was a stuffed dodo from the
Mauritius, a bird extinct now over
200 years. Os course there was
some rubbish as well. The younger
Tradescant was shrewd enough to
exchange an alleged dragon's
for that of a rare bird from Turkmj
but he exhibited a feather from tlr /
phenix’s wing, a piece of the stone
of Diana's tomb and blood that
rained in the Isle of Wight in 11771
When John Tradescant, Jr., di<-4itr
1662 long and bitter litigation en
sued between the deceased’s widow
and. Ashmole as to the right to in
herit the collection. Eventually the
court of chancery decided in Ash
mole’s favor, and he carried off the
Tradescantian museum to form the
basis of the Ashmolean at Oxford,
while Mrs. Tradescant was so cha
grined at her defeat that she
drowned herself in the pond of the
botanic garden on April 3, 1678. —
London Globe.
Ons Part of Meeting.
“Did you ever meet an old friend
whom you didn’t meet?" was the
enigma put up to a llailemite by a
neighbor. The Harlemite never did.
“I did this morning,’’ the neigh
bor explained. “I was rushing
downtown on a subway express.
We passed a local, also
under somewhat less speed. I wffij
hanging to a strap, and as I
into a car of the local that was oppo
site my car I recognized a man 1 had
known intimately, but had not seen
for fifteen years. He recognized
me at the same moment, and there
was a mutual salute. Then my train
forged ahead of the other, and he
was lost to sight.
“You see, 1 met him, yet I didn't
meet him.”—New York Globe.
Great Memories.
Themistocles could call by name
every citizen of Athens. Cyrus is
said to have known the name of
every soldier in his army. Lord
Granville could repeat every word
in the Greek Testament, and Lord
Macaulay is said to have been able
to repeat all of the “Paradise Lost.”
Theodore Parker knew most of the
dates in ancient and modern his
tory, and one Thomas Cranwell is
reputed to have committed to mem
ory in three months the entire Bi
ble. Ben Jonson was able to repeat
all that he had ever written
much besides, and the actor iSW
upon a wager repeated in or ■
every word of a newspaper that n?
had read over once.
A Slight Mistake.
St. John, who was very near
sighted, once went to a civic ban
quet and forgot his eyeglasses. He
sat next to the Chevalier Pique
assiette. The chevalier's hand was
gracefully but negligently posed
upon the cloth. A smile of antici
patory satisfaction at the prospect
of unlimited turtle soup illumined
his classic features. Suddenly a
yell of anguish startled the guests.
What had happened? Only this —
the myopic St. John had simply but
effectually harpooned the lily white
hand of the chevalier with his fork
as he remarked in a firm but
tone, “My bread, I think.” —1
naut. '* ; A