The Atlanta Georgian. (Atlanta, GA.) 1906-1907, July 07, 1906, Image 6
fl THE ATLANTA GEORGIAN. piATrnnAT, jult t. hoi The Atlanta Georgian. JOHN TEMPLE GRAVES, Editor. F. L. SEELY, President. Telephono Subscription Riles: Published Every Afternoon One Year........ $4.80 Except Sunday by Six Months 2.SO THE GEORGIAN CO. Three Months 1.25 at 25 W. Alabama Street, By Carrier, per week IOc Atlanta, Gs. 17“ Fnfered •• second-elan matter April 88. lZO*. at the Poetofflco at Atlanta. Oa.. nndar act of congreu of March l lit*. THE GEORGIAN COMES TO GEORGIA AS THE SUNSHINE Summer frlendthlp, Whose flattaring leavea that ahadowed ua In Our proaperlty, with the leant guet drop off In th' Autumn of adveralty.. —Philip Maaalngar Hearst’s Announcement Makes Bryan Sure. The announcement of William Randolph Hearst, pou ltice and definite In Ita denial of any presidential ambi tion, removes from the path of William J. Bryan the only real or considerable obstacle to a third nomination by the Democratic party for the presidency of the United States. There can be no misunderstanding of Mr. Hoarst's distinct and definite statement Like everything he does and everything that be says. It Is bold, frank and explicit, end not only removes him os a possible candidate for the presidency, but gives In the strongest and tersest form his on splendid and potential Indorsement to Mr. Bryan's name. The statement which Mr. Hearst haa telegraphed from 8an Francisco la the most significant and the moat Important utterance which has ao far been made In the matter of Mr. Bryan'e renomlnatlon. It has the most po tential bearing upon the fortnnea of the Democratic party. There wai no other man In the party who could liavo successfully opposed Mr. Bryan for the nomination. There was no other man ao worthy to have received the nomlnaUon as Mr. Hoarat. If Mr. Bryan has been the theorist, Mr. Hearst has been the executive of our mod em Democracy. It Mr. Bryan has been the speaking ovangel of popular rights and liberties, Mr. Hearst has been the fearless and Inconquerable agent of their accom plishment. It Mr. Bryan haa said things eloquently and superbly, Mr. Hearst haa done things fearlessly and mag nificently. And no, when the great Democrat who does things falls loyally and henrUly Into line behind the grant Demo crat who has preached things and educated the people, there can be but one Issue to the nominating convention, nnd the clouds have all beon scattered thdt left any threat or promise of defeat for the superb and eloquent leader of our modem Democracy, Mr. Bryan’s nomination Is now safely assured. Thank God for that! lie represents all that Is beat, cleanest and purest In ouf modern Democracy. He has never apologized and never recanted one lota of the doctrines for which the Ume servers and the halt Repub licans of the party have fought him. There la no ataln upon his consistency, and no stigma upon his personal or political honor, be Is a great, clean, brave statesman, lie has never deserved the abuse of his enemies or the half-hearted support of the truckling and time-serv ing members of his party. Hla character baa extorted the admiration of hla pollttcal opponents. Hla record la unassailable, and with the great executive of the Dem ocratic party and the eight great Democratic new*papers of William Randolph Hearst thundering loyally behind hts campaign, there can be no possible doubt of the tri umphant nomination and of the equally triumphant elec tion of William J. Bryan In 1908. And he will be less than the man we take him to bo. and less worthy than we believe him to be of the great things that are In store for him. If he does not rncognlro both now and then the Incomparable debt which he owee In this great emergency of hts political life to the courage, the forecasting genius snd the mag nificent executive work of William Randolph Hoarst and cared for until they hsve attained the age and strength to do the work which the world expects of them. And yet the same human providence that protects the young In animals snd regards the offspring of the brute creation has boon wild and unwlso to the summoning of llttl# children to the work and the wear of full grown men. Tbs awakening comes In time, but It comes none too soon, and the world will be better for the passage of this bill if It shall be repeated la every commonwealth and In every state. And so, in this hour It Is our pleasant privilege to congratulate those gentlemen who have'fought the good fight In Its earlier stages. We congratulate the Hon. Madison Bell, a .noble and generous young statesman who was the father of the original bill In the house. We congratulate the Hon. Hooper Alexander, and the Hon. W. A Covington, of Colquitt, and the honorable gentlemen of the house who have lifted eloquent apd convincing voices in behalf of this nobla measure. Wa epngratulate with especial heartiness the Hon. Charles Murphy Candler, whose speech In the senate at the last scanlon was reckoned as perhaps the ablest argument delivered upon this topic during the progress of tho de bate. Wo congratulate Dr. McKelway and the child labor committee upon their faithful and now successful cam paign of education; and we are sure that to all of these gentlemen, as to The Georgian, which has been tho un varying advocate of the bill, as also to the right think ing people of the state, the settlement of this question brings satisfaction, contentment and Inspiration for the future of good causes In the senate. The Resurrection of the Child Labor Bill. It will be pleasant news to many thoughtful and philanthropic people throughout the state of Georgia to hear that the child labor bill which was killed by the Georgia senate at Its laat session la now about to receive from that same source Ua triumphant resurrection. The majority of the present senate have signed the hill, which Is practically equivalent to the measure pre sented by the Hon. Madison Bell to the last legislature and passed by that body to the consideration of the upper house. There seems to be now absolutely nothing In the way of the fall and satisfactory success of tht# measure, and in this happy consummation wo shall all rejoice. It la an especial source of comment and congratula tion that tho manufacturers themselves seem to hnvo reached a fell agreement with the philanthropists In this matter, and that this righteous nnd noble measure will be practically unopposed- The manufacturers declare with much show of justice thnt their opposition to the bill heretofore has been due to the fact that It was a dis crimination, and, therefore, a reflection upon tho manufac turers in the fact that only the children employed In fac tories were freed from the child slavery, while other children of the ««mn age employed In other business en terprises were left untouched and unprotected. Aud If this claim be true. It made some justification for tho protest of the manufacturers and Is a double source of rejoicing in the more comprehensive nature of the bill which protects children In every line of business, nnd provides for their education, as well as for their exetup- The Legitimate Exchanges The Georgian does not yield to any Indlvldnal or or ganisation,in its desire to suppress the Iniquitous bucket ■bops whero speculation on margins is carried on'by men who are not aud could not bo members of tht great legitimate exchanges. We share In the fullest degree the righteous Indigna tion of the general public against a system by which the Ignorant and confiding are robbed of the money which they put in bucket, shops with the hope of getting rich quick. It Is a known fact that the exchanges of the large cities are as anxious for the suppression of these bucket shops as any reformer of us all, and that no man who haa ever been engaged In the bucket shop business can from that’day forward buy a seat on such exchanges for any amount of money. He Is a marked man, an outcast from the world of legitimate trading. It ahoqld; require no effort to demonstrate the fact that, the bucket (hop la a fraud on.Its face when, It Is not and cannot be a member of the legitimate exchanges and cannot honestly got the dally quotations direct from those centers. The man who bays futures through such bucket shops Is Simply betting with the' proprietors, whose Interests always are on the beaV side of the market, and It has already been shown In these columns how they do not hesitate, when a customer has a mar gin of profit on their books, to manipulate quotations during u fluctuating mnrkot In order to wipe out such profits nnd cover In his profits. He Is utterly Ignorant of these underground processes and Is powerless to pre vent them. He Is systematically robbed and the legiti mate markets are demoralized. But we Insist that there Is a vast deal of difference between such bucket shops and the legitimate exchanges, where the prices of commodities are made and regulated nml whore the, most stringent rules prevail for the maintenance of tho highest honor. The Georgian haa not hesitated to stand forth and point out the material difference between legitimate trading for future delivery nnd those gambling establishments known aa bucket shops, and Uie cordial Indorsement which has come to us from all quarters'la a aufllclent Indication that we have done a genuine service In making this distinction clear. Wo repeat that the manufacturers of cotton goods would be almost compelled to go out of business If they wore not allowed to make contracts for cotton for future dellrery. Once more we give tho Illustration for the benefit of those who may not have seen It previously. If a cotton mill Is given an order today for a hundred bales of cotton goods for delivery next October, that cotton mill must begin the work of spinning It Immediately. But how doos the spinner know what the price of cotton will be next October and what, consequently, would be the proper basts on which to make a prlca for such cot ton goods? He simply ascertains what Is the price of the necessary amount of cotton to he. delivered next October. Through the legitimate exchanges he can buy a hundred bales of cotton for October delivery at a price aa definite as he could go out In the open spot market apd buy the actual cotton for Immediate deliv ery. Knowing what he will have to pay next October for tho cottsn he has bought he makes the price of his cotton goods accordingly, buys an equivalent amount of cotton for delivery next October to replace the fleecy staple he Is about to consume and thus haa a definite standard by which to work. Ho figures definitely on what will be the value of his cotton goods next Octo ber nnd he goes to work accordingly. We respectfully submit that under any other system the Bplnnor would be engaged In a more speculative business than bucket shopping Itself If he had to sell cotton goods for future delivery without any knowl edge of what ho would have to pay for the raw material three months hence. It would mean the most absolute demoralisation of his business. In our desire to be entirely frank we have said, and now repeat, that It is entirely possible to gamble on futures on the legitimate exchanges If a man Is de termined to do so. One of the Imperative rules of the oxchunges la that commodities bought for future dellrery must be actually delivered when the time comes-pa pro vision which greatly differentiates It from the bucket shop, where there Is no expectation of actually execut ing tho contract nnd no machinery fqr doing ao. But thcro la nothing, of course, to prevent a trader on the legitimate ’exchanges from selling the cotton he has bought before the time for delivery and therein lies the possibility of speculating, or gambling If you choose. The only triply to this frank confession Is that It Is insslblo to gamble on the wind and the weather if one Is disposed to do so, nnd all the lnws on earth cannot entirely prevent It The legitimate exchanges maintain that a large amount of their trading la on the pari of Bplnners who merely "hedge'' their contracts so as to replace the cotton they consume with other cottotr bought on a known basis for future dellrery. Furthermore it Is to be pointed out that the legiti mate exchanges do not make small transactions, and the petty pikers who cannot afford to trade In future con tracts—who have but a small amount of money and hence can but 111 afford to lose It, are thereby eliminated. These, exchanges do not make transactions of leas than a hundred bales, and the salaried man who la ao often tempted by the bucket shops to his ruin finds no field of misery. But we have the courage to point out the real difference between the bucket shop and the legitimate exchanges with their .honorable membership and strin gent rules. We are confident that our record of Inde pendence Is well enough established to permit us to pre sent these factfc fairly to the people In order that an Injustice may not be dono In wiping out a patent and crying fraud. tlon Irom toll. ' % • . There never was anything more naturally aud more I for his operations on the legitimate exchanges, logically commendable than this child labor bill. Every j We wish it understood that we are heart and soul in p:trallel In nature austains It The little calves In the I favor of the extermination o( the bucket shop. It la the meadows and the jouug colts upon the hills are nurtured [hot bed of fraud and brings tyon the people a world The Real Estate View. In this Issuo of The Geo.-sma w!” bo found state ments from the representative real estate dealers of-At lanta containing facts and figures which speak more eloquently of the proaperlty of the city than all tho words bne could employ. • They tell of tho*bulldlng, within a few years, of a magnificent residential and manufacturing community on a alto which was formerly strewn frith ashes and de vastated by a calamity from which the most optimistic never dreamed that her citizens could recover. But with a pluck and a determination for which Atlanta has become justly famous her believers went to work to resurrect tho old aud to construct the new city of which generations to come might be proud. No class of our great population deserves more credit for this miracle of recuperation than do the real estate dealers of Atlanta. With Implicit faith in their city and with that keen Judgment for which they are noted, they went to work to convince the citizens of er sections .that Atlanta gave promise of being wbat lHs today—the most magnificent city In the South. They have spent hundreds of thousands of dollars In advertising her advantages. They have unceasingly glorified a climate that Is pulsed with energy, inspira tion and achievement. They have made It possible and have helped mightily to construct beautiful churches, splendid schools, paved streets, street car systems, san itary, water, lighting plants, office buildings, factories, store-houses and other buildings which require enormous expanse of ground. In addition to making of these buildings a permanent place of residence, and commerce, they brought tq the city laborers, architects, builders and others who would be employed In doing this work. These added to the population. Our city grew apace. The railroads realized the opportunities of the future. They took advantage of them. They as well as our citizens have prospered with the years. And so we grow great Every section of the city la enjoying prosperity un paralleled. A ride on any of the trolley lines will dis close a panoramic picture of new buildings and bring to the ear the music of the Hammer and the saw. Work men are busy earning a living for wife and children. The wise one Is laying aside part of bis earnings and Investing It in Atlanta real estate. Ha sees the men tor whom he tolls grow wealthy and he determines to do likewise. From a small and modest beginning he bullda for himself the foundation of a fortune for the future. He supplies his old age with comforts, and generations to come with a competence. , , No city In the world has more home-owners than has Atlanta. The real estate' dealers, although vitally Interested financially, may be to an extent classed as philanthro pists. Their earnest appeal to economy and Industry hat had its effect Men have been brought -to ; save who khew nothing but extravagance. Many a mother and (illd hare been supplied with a home whereas they wUuld bare lived In a rented cottage until illness or old age took from them the head of the house who was their sole support, and left them upon the world with little hope for the future, The real estate dealers Justly deserve the support of the public. As a class they are keen, conservative and energetic business men. Aside from whatever financial Interests may accrue, we heartily commend them aa worthy of belief and thoughtful of public Interests, be cause In serving themselves they must necessarily serve the public. These men are publle spirited to a degree that Is bound to result in the upbuilding of any com munity In which they locate. We take this occasion to emphasize upon the publle the Items of valuable Information contained‘in the real estate page of any reputable newspaper. We do not urge upon you to' read only the columns of The Geor gina. We simply ask you to look for an opportunity; and no matter through which column It is brought to you, ■else It A divine providence endowed the majority of us with some business judgment 'We were given to know that certain things would be done. It la plain as the noon-day aun that suburban property, easy of ac cess, is far more valuable than property remotely lo cated. We would encourage our friendi and especially young people, to look about, select a site with care and then make a purchase. One cannot go far wrong; for Atlanta, one of the most magnificent cities In the coun try, will never lag behind. Investments In Atlanta dirt are as good as government bonds. We simply suggest to Investors to be' conservative. Beyond the financial consideration Involved we take pteaanre In offering today this real estate edition of The Georgian for the reason that It contains much In which we are firm believers, for ourselves and for others. and the running streams whero we wandered with the happy-hearted freedom which owed nothing to Runny- mede or Yorktown—tho freedom that Is the Inalienable heritage of every foil-blooded boy. The delinquencies of youth, as wo cast them over in our own minds, grow strangely small and inoffensive and we smile Indulgently upon the Importance they as sumed In our callow days. More than once it has re strained the rod of correction—this remembrance that wo ourselves had been guilty of the same transgressions In the same frail period of youth and thoughtlessness. This Is after all the proper attitude to assumo to ward the undeveloped heart and mind which havo not yet passed tbroagb the tutelage and experience which go toward the making of manhood. As well expect to gather figs from thistles as to look for sober conserva tism In that wild nature which has not yet been disci plined Into a knowlcdgo of social laws and duties. Time soon enough will teach these lofty but sobering lessons and the buoyancy, the spontaneity, the. freedom and candor of the formative years will be gone like last year’s thistledown. We lhall.look in vain for the "turned np pantaloons and the merry whistled tunes,” we shall listen in vain for the Uthe, quick tread of bare feet and the April change of smiles and tears. From tho boisterous rebel of yesterday will come the child of larger growth,' destined to take hla part In the dusty conflict of life. w In tho meditative hours of advancing years we are ready to confess that Increase of knowledge is in crease of sorrow and one lmpfilse of boyhood Is worth all the wisdom of tho schoolmen. “I remember, I remember The fir-trees dark and high; I used to think their slender tops Were close against the aky. It was a childish Ignorance, But now ’Us little Joy ' To know I'm farther off from heaven Than when I waB a boy." A TRIBUTE TO THE GEORGIAN. It seems hard Indeed to realize that The Georgian has become In so short a while such a power In our midst The success that greeted It at Its recent birth and has crowned It with such giory and success Is truly marvelous. i Its pages are filled with chaste and wholesome read-' Ing, and there Is absolutely nothing trashy or nnclean about It. Neither la there anything of the sensational which always detracts from the brightest of papers. There Is no paper In the South that can boast of a finer or more intellectual class of men from our honored editor down to those occupying the most Insignificant positions. Whtn The Georgian declared her Intention of barring out all Whisky advertisements as well as all unclean ones her publishers lost thouiands*of dollars— yes, tens of thousands—but she Vent up immeasurably in the minds of all right-thinking people and time alone will prove the grand and far-reaching effect this noble example will wield on other papers. Atlanta aa a city Is jroud of The Georgian and Georgia, her namesake, feels tonored at her stlectlon of u name. The country ns a whole loves the paper and even -the dear, delightful little wretch-s, the news boys of today, the senators of the future, cry “Here’s yer Georgian” with a peculiar pride and tendernesa In their voices, showing that even they appreciate Its greatness. 2 Warren Place. MRS. D. A RUSSELL. THE RIGHT OF 8UFFRAGE. Saturday Evening. It was Sidney Smith who proposed the health of "the much calumniated but good King Herod.” There are times perhaps when Impatient age la al most ready to confirm In sober seriousness the Jest of the English wit, for It there It anything that can make more noise and mischief than a boy It is—to be trite- two boys, and so on in geometrical progression. We have Just passed through a period which by courtesy la regarded as the birthday of the republic, but aa a simple matter of fact It Is the hey-day of thp American boy. True It Is that a number of respectable gentlemen more or lest advanced In years mount tho rostrum on this anniversary of our Independence and glorify the republic. Our ambassadors beyond the seas gather about them the American residents In their par ticular locality and hold their patriotic love-feasts. But after dll It Is tho American of the rising and not of the risen generation who appropriates peculiarly to himself this birthday of liberty and aosames a free dom which parents and a parental government deny to him at every other season of the year except the Chrnt- mas holidays. It la he who makes night hideous and the day as burdensome as the grasshoper with rockets and cfnnon crackers and the varied contrivances of sordid' Ingenuity. When the wee, weary hours at last arrive and we succeed in slipping away to alumberland we are quite ready to toast "the good King Herod." Bat the calmer hours bring charity and wisdom, and we know In oar Inmost heart that we envy the exuber ance of youth. We aay with the poet, that when our real sympathy with the Joys and sorrows of boyhood have run dry "Time bath bat Uttia left him to destroy; O happy years, once more who would not be a boy.” Imagination carries us back to the woods and fields Who said 'tls right that the negro ahould vote? Pray, tell one reason why He should take a hand in politics. Is the ballot made cleaner thereby? Can it with propriety be laid , That he helps to eliminate the bad? Can even one virtue be plead, Whereby an excuse may be had? Does the suffrage conduce to good citizenship When extended to the black? Pray, tell What refining Influence this privilege exerts. Haa the tost In the past proved well? To be honest and fair and acknowledge the truth— His vote can never assist In throwing off tho yoke of corruption and graft, And forces of evil resist Nor can it bo said that we need "darky’s" vote In directing the affairs of the state. We can never attain to a loftier plane, But only contusion create, So long ns wo rely upon tho purchasable vote And permit tho corruptionists to reign. For truly 'tls only a question of price— A question of monetary gain. Why close onr eyes to the truth and the right? What excuse to remain longer blind? For never can the negro's vote lend In the fight To better the condition of his kind. And neither can his vote ever strengthen the right. Nor assist In opposing the wrong. Hq Is merely a tool to be used In the fight; Confusion he can only prolong. Now would it not be more prudent and wise— In keeping with Justice and love— To exercise the right which divinely Is ours— A positive command from above? Why “despise dominion,” equality to welcome, In the face of God's holy command Which was given to Adam In the Garden of Eden And later to Noah’s band? We hare wandered astray In forbidden paths; Already we have gone too far. Behold the destruction of the cities of old— The cities of Sodom and Gomorrah. But the question may be asked “What hath ft to do With Georgia's present campaign?” And the old traditional advice they renew— That we should forever refrain • From agitating and discussing the question Of the races (so called), and they say That the question should be left for the future to solve Should be left tor a future day. But allow me to whisper a little word here— If you search you will find ft Is true— The ancients were deceived as we are Received, And believed In equality too. And history records the story of their fate— The story of the flood and of fire. They pursued the same course that la being puraued. Actuated by the same deal re. But a wave of reform o’erspreads the land, i' The people are aroused and awake. They are taking It upon them selves to demand The correction of the franchise mistake. And may the Ume be near at hand. When Justice looms up o’er the land; When virtue stands a beacon light. Indorsing nothing but the right May each one lend a helping hand. And In the sternest tone demand. That "Virtue now shall have Its sway; Opposing forces, stand away." —CHAS. W. LYEXS. <8 Falrlle St, Atlanta, Ua. By Prlrate Leased Wire. New York, July 7.—That Ambassador W hi telaw Retd is to become father-in- law to a lord seems to bo pretty well settled in the minds of those who should know. There ts doubt however, as to Just which title hla daughter, Miss Jean, is to acquire. Somo days ago It was reported, of course, on the highest authority, that the lucky man was Lord Brooke, son of tho earl of Warwick and his beautiful countess, once known as the "babbling Brooke" because of her connection with the no torious Tranby-Croft affair, and now prominent as a socialist Now comes the rumor, also “on the highest authority,” that It Is not to bo Lord Brooke at all, but Lord Acheson, heir to the earldom of Gosford. Vis count Acheson’s mother, tho countess of Gosford, Is daughter of the duchess of Devonshire, and a sister of tho dow ager duchess of Hamilton. Archibald Charles Montagu Brabazon Acheson Is heir to the earldom of Gos ford. Viscount Is a courtesy title. He was born In 1877 and served aa a lieu tenant In the Second Coldstream Guards in the South African campaign of 1899-1000-1901. He was twice aide- de-camp and was wounded at the bat tle of Modder River. In tho mean time, tho Reids, emulating Bre’r Rab bit, are “layln' low an' sayln" nothin’.” Bad news comes of the health of William Waldorf Astor from London. One report has it: ■ "William Waldorf Astor Is today as feeble as*a man of 80. dlls figure Is humped; his step painful, uncertain and faltering. He leans heavily .on a stick as he walks. Sometimes a butler assist him. His face Is pale and shows plainly the lines of great suffering." That only one university* girl In ev ery six weds la the conclusion to be drawn from statistics complied by Sec- rsfhry Arthur E. Bestor, of the Alumni Association of the University of Chi cago. Hts book shows that, since 1898, only 171 of the 1,0(0 girls who have graduated from the university have makrled. The announcement that Davy John son, race track plunger and gambler, is broke again causes little excitement. Davy Is either "broke” or “flush" all tho time. There la.no middle ground for him. Hla career would furnish a first-rate text against the evils of gambling and the Impossibility of a non-professional being able to ao any thing but lose hla money when he goes against any sort of a gambling game and keeps at It. Bernard Shaw,. Arnold Daly and all the balance of those Interested In the production here Of “Mrs. Warren’s Pro fession" are happy because of the de cision of a New York court that the much discussed play Is all right frorp a legal viewpoint. Mr. Shaw doclares: . "I havo nothing to aay. except to contrast my position In*America.* In America,’every conceivable Insult and outrage was heaped on me by the New York press, which forced the police to arrest Arnold Daly nnd.hls whole com- pany: but America has also given my remedy. "My case has been heard, and my play restored to tho stage with its mo tives. My character and that of Mr. Daly and his company have been pub licly vindicated.” GEORGIANS IN GOTHAM. By Private Leased Wire. New York, July 7.—Here are somo of the visitors In Now York today: ATLANTA—G. G. Van Dyke. AUGUSTA—D. G. Fogarty. MACON—C. H. Humphreys. THIS DATE IN HISTORY.- JULY 7. 1770—Turkish fleet burnt In Cheemeh Bay. 1798—Nicholas I of Russia born. Died March 8, 1S55. ISOS'—Jerome Napoleon . ‘Bonaparte born. Died 1870. 1808—Michele Anart, historian, born. 181S—The allies entered Paris. 1889— Meeting of the Emperors Fran cis Joseph and Napoleon III at Vlllafranca. 1864—Confederates evacuated Harper's Ferry. 1883—Prince Eltel-Frederlck, second . son of Emperor William II of Germany, bom. 1891—Four condemned murderers ex ecuted by electricity In Sing Sing prison. 1894— The Falcon, with the Peary aux iliary expedition, sailed from St. Johns, N. F. , , 1895— Daughter bom to former Presi dent Grover Cleveland. 1898—President McKinley signed reso lution to annex HawalL LINCOLN'8 ONLY POEM. It may be new to toms to learn that to Lincoln's many well known accompllth- mentn must be added that of a poet. The following wne written by him and read at his ilster’a wedding: An Moeen bin recorded, And noon a bride was made. Ten thousand times ten thousand Of centnrlea swirmed around Before t bride wne formed. And yet no piste was found. The Lord then was not wllllog That man ehould be alone. And caused a. sleep upon him. And from him took a bona And closed thn fleeh Inetead thereof And then be took the ume And of It msdt a woman. And brought -her to the man. Then Adam he rejoiced r To see bis lorlnf bride, A pert of his own body, Tbs prod set of his tide. Thn woman wan not taken From Adam's feet, wa eee. So we most not ebuee"her, Thn meaning seem* to bn. Thn woman was not taken From Adam’s heed, wn know, TO show nhn must not ruin him— ’Tin nrldnntly no. Thn woman, nhn wan taken From under Adam's arm. So she must bn protected Fran Injurlee nnd i!3L_ G«t It Going and Coming. A britl* III 8r. L"'iN tea appu*! for i ill von*#* b*H*aust her tm*!*nt! n*fu«**a ts klM hor. Thn« th** ninn #»f tbo pr#*fl»nt t!av 4*tiuaIIy Into trouble If h* kin rn **11 if be d< ;on*L—Baltimore America a.